Details for Sam Houston's 1857 Campaign in Marshall

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5203010174

Data

Marker Number 10174
Atlas Number 5203010174
Marker Title Sam Houston's 1857 Campaign in Marshall
Index Entry Houston, Sam
Address W. Burleson and N. Franklin St.
City Marshall
County Harrison
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 371371
UTM Northing 3601881
Subject Codes governors; lumber topics
Marker Year 1964
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location on the NE corner
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 18" x 28"
Marker Text On May 23, 1857, during his first Texas gubernatorial race, Sam Houston came to Marshall, the hometown of two of his most outspoken critics, Robert Loughery and Louis T. Wigfall, for a much anticipated debate against his opponent Hardin Runnels. Here under an oak tree, in an overwhelmingly secessionist area, the Unionist Houston spoke so eloquently that Runnels, who was scheduled to follow, declined to speak. Though he lost the election, Houston's stirring oratory brought him forty-eight percent of the Harrison County vote.

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