Details for Alvarado

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5251000137

Data

Marker Number 137
Atlas Number 5251000137
Marker Title Alvarado
Index Entry Alvarado
Address
City Alvarado
County Johnson
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 668305
UTM Northing 3586171
Subject Codes cities and towns
Marker Year 1994
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location College Street, Alvarado Town Square, Alvarado
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Early settler David Mitchell established a trading post near here in the late 1840s, about the time colonists of W. S. Peters' empresario grant began to settle the area. Colonist William Balch, who settled on an area land grant in 1852, was later to become known as the "Father of Alvarado" for his efforts in having the townsite surveyed in 1854, establishing the first general merchandise stores on the square, and for donating land for a cemetery, school, and union church. The town, named for Alvarado, Mexico, soon boasted a post office, homes, businesses, and churches. A community school established about 1855 became The Alvarado Masonic Institute in 1875. Rail lines extended through Alvarado by the Missouri Pacific Railroad in 1881 and by the Chicago, Texas, and Mexican Central Railroad in 1884 spurred a local economic boom. By 1885 Alvarado had several churches, two schools, two gins, an opera house, a bank, a newspaper, and a population of about 2,000. The Masonic Institute became the Alvarado Normal Institute in 1899 and Alvarado High School in 1908-09. A large jail/town hall erected at this site in the mid-1880s was removed in the 1920s and replaced with a garden arrangement; a gazebo was added later. (1994)

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