Details for Binion Homestead

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5181007341

Data

Marker Number 7341
Atlas Number 5181007341
Marker Title Binion Homestead
Index Entry Binion Homestead
Address
City Pilot Grove
County Grayson
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 738088
UTM Northing 3701173
Subject Codes cemetery; farms
Marker Year 1996
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location .7 mi. south of Pilot Grove on Binion Rd. to Taylor Rd., west on Taylor .10 mi. to marker on no side of Taylor Rd.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Georgia natives Thomas Noel Binion (1827-1900) and Pauline Walker Binion (1829-1915) migrated to Texas after the Civil War. They moved to the Oxford community in Grayson County where they purchased this 107-acre farm in 1871. Thomas and Pauline reared four children here: Zeph (1856-1928), Homer (1865-1926), Robert E. Lee "Eddie" (1869-1945), and Sarah (1872-1955). After Thomas and Pauline died, they were buried in the family cemetery northwest of their homestead. The farm was inherited by their children. Eddie Binion became a merchant in nearby Pilot Grove, but moved back to the family homestead with his sister Sarah after the death of his wife. Eddie raised sugar cane and operated a syrup mill here from the turn of the century until the 1940s. The mill first used mules to operate the crusher, and wood fires to cook the molasses. When fuel oil and coal were readily available in the 1920s, a piston engine replaced the mule, and coal replaced the wood fires. During the Depression years, cane continued to arrive but money to purchase coal and fuel oil diminished. The mule was reinstated, but the Binion Syrup Mill foundered in the 1940s. The mill was dismantled and the iron and steel sold for use in World War II.