Details for Tod-Milby Home Site

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5201010728

Data

Marker Number 10728
Atlas Number 5201010728
Marker Title Tod-Milby Home Site
Index Entry Tod-Milby Home Site
Address 614 Broadway St.
City Houston
County Harris
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 279586
UTM Northing 3290108
Subject Codes military topics; Texas Revolution, Republic of Texas; U.S.-Mexico War; naval topics; railroads; residences
Marker Year 1967
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location SW corner Broadway and E. Elm streets. Marker reported missing Mar. 1993. Map dot approximate.
Private Property No
Marker Condition Missing
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text John Grant Tod (1808-1877), a Kentuckian, left home at 17 to go to sea. Served in Mexican, U.S. navies. Came to Texas, 1837; served in Republic Navy, 1837-1845, as naval agent, supervising purchase and equipment of vessels of second Texas Navy; commander, naval yard at Galveston; acting secretary of Navy; commodore. Tod carried official notification of Texas' annexation from the Congress of the United States, presenting it to President Anson Jones, January 13, 1846. Served in U. S. Navy as agent of the Quartermaster's Department during Mexican War, 1846-1848. Assistant state engineer, 1857-1859. Was one of organizers and builders of Texas' first railroad, the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado; came to Harrisburg to serve as its treasurer. Purchased cottage here and moved into it with his family in November, 1866. This remained the family residence for seventy-six years. Additions made by son-in-law, C. H. Milby, resulted in a large brick house. This structure, known as the "Milby House," was an historic landmark until demolished in 1959. Captain Tod and his family are buried in Glendale Cemetery, five blocks southeast on Magnolia Street. (1967)

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