Details for Sarah Bradley Dodson

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5185008570

Data

Marker Number 8570
Atlas Number 5185008570
Marker Title Sarah Bradley Dodson
Index Entry Dodson, Sarah Bradley
Address
City Bedias
County Grimes
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 218115
UTM Northing 3414510
Subject Codes flags; Texas Revolution, Republic of Texas; women, women's history topics; military topics
Marker Year 1986
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location from Bedias take SH 90 N approximately 4 miles to roadside park.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Born in Kentucky in 1812, eleven-year-old Sarah Bradley and her parents arrived in Texas in 1823 with Stephen F. Austin's old three hundred colonists, settling near Brazoria. Sarah married Archelaus Bynum Dodson of nearby Harrisburg on May 17, 1835. As tensions mounted between Mexico and the Texian colonists, a call for military volunteers was circulated in September 1835, and Archelaus Dodson became First Lt. in Captain Andrew Robinson's Harrisburg Volunteers. Sarah offered to design and make a flag for her husband's company. Using blue, white, and red calico, she fashioned a flag of three equal squares, with a five pointed white star in the center of the blue square. Reportedly the first Lone Star flag, the banner was displayed in the town of Gonzales in October 1835, and in December flew during the Siege of Bexar. When the Declaration of Independence was signed, two flags were seen flying over Convention Hall. One was described as a Lone Star flag and is believed to have been the one made by Sarah Dodson. Following the Texan victory at San Jacinto, the Dodsons lived in Fort Bend County, then moved in 1844 to Grimes County. They donated the land for Bethel Cemetery (5 mi. N) where Sarah was buried in 1848. Texas Sesquicentennial 1836 - 1986

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