Details for Jane Long Boarding House

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5157009006

Data

Marker Number 9006
Atlas Number 5157009006
Marker Title Jane Long Boarding House
Index Entry Long, Jane, Boarding House
Address
City Richmond
County Fort Bend
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 232446
UTM Northing 3275752
Subject Codes women, women's history topics; educational topics; pioneers
Marker Year 1975
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 200 Block of N. 4th St., between Morton and Calhoun St.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Born in Maryland in 1798, Jane H. Wilkinson moved to Mississippi (1811) and became the ward of her famous relative, Gen. James Wilkinson, field commander of the United States Army. Jane married Dr. James Long in 1815 and later followed him on a filibustering expedition to free Texas from Spain. In 1821 Long led his forces into battle, leaving Jane alone with their daughter Ann and slave girl Kian at Point Bolivar, near Galveston. On Dec. 21, 1821, with snow falling, their food supply gone, and Kian ill, Jane gave birth to a daughter, then rose and got food and firewood for her family. Her heroism earned her the name "Mother of Texas." Later she learned of her husband's death in Mexico. During the period Texas was a colony and a republic, Jane Long operated two well-known boarding houses. She started the first in Brazoria in 1832; her guests included William B. Travis, Sam Houston, and Mirabeau B. Lamar. In 1837 Jane moved to Richmond and on this site opened another boarding house which became a center for social and political activities as well as lodging for prominent Texans and European visitors. Jane ran this hotel until her plantation near town became prosperous in the 1840s. She died in 1880 and is buried in richmond's Morton Cemetery.

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