Details for Spring Hill

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5349011638

Data

Marker Number 11638
Atlas Number 5349011638
Marker Title Spring Hill
Index Entry Spring Hill
Address
City Dawson
County Navarro
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 717045
UTM Northing 3536237
Subject Codes settlements; ghost towns
Marker Year 1974
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From Dawson, take FM 709 N
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Oldest community in Navarro County. The springs at this site supplied water to Indians for centuries before white settlers arrived. In 1838 Dr. George Washington Hill (1814-60) built a trading post near the springs, and in October of that year a skirmish between a surveying party and Kickapoo Indians occurred in this vicinity. After serving as Republic of Texas Secretary of War under President Sam Houston, Dr. Hill returned here about 1843, reopened the trading post, built a home, and began practicing medicine. In Jan. 1847, his brother-in-law, Robert Harve Matthews (1814-94), settled here. A post office was established on Nov. 5, 1849, with Dr. Hill as postmaster. A building erected in 1850 served as both church and schoolhouse; by 1855, Matthews had opened a store. During the Civil War, a Confederate training camp was located here. At the height of its growth, in the 1870s, Spring Hill boasted general mercantile stores, blacksmith shops, saloons, a drugstore, hotel, masonic lodge, flour mill, cotton gin, and rock quarry. Decline began in 1881, when the community was bypassed by the Cotton Belt Railroad. The post office closed on June 15, 1906. The cemetery and a few foundations bordering deserted streets remain to mark site of Spring Hill.

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