Details for Parker County, C.S.A.

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5367003941

Data

Marker Number 3941
Atlas Number 5367003941
Marker Title Parker County, C.S.A.
Index Entry Parker County, C.S.A.
Address College St. at Courthouse Square
City Weatherford
County Parker
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 612647
UTM Northing 3625192
Subject Codes counties; Civil War
Marker Year 1964
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Courthouse Square, east side, College Street, Weatherford
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Part of a colonial grant to S.M. Williams and Stephen F. Austin, father of Texas, but with no permanent settlers before 1850, this county was created in 1855 and named for Isaac Parker, its legislative sponsor. By 1860 it had 4,213 people and in 1861 its voters favored secession 535 to 61. Oliver Loving, a settler, was an official stock raiser, furnishing beef to the Confederacy in the Civil War. He and 18 other men organized a full-time patrol against the frequent, bloody Indian raids. Citizens of adjacent counties took refuge here. In 1864 three local men were charged with treason. One admitted inviting federal General J.G. Blunt to come from the Cherokee nation and give Parker County protection from the Indians. General John R. Baylor, a local rancher, was an officer in the Arizona-New Mexico campaign to make the Confederacy an ocean-to-ocean nation, and after victories there became Governor of Arizona. He was in the Confederate Congress from 1863 to 1865. Parker County sent the Confederate army nine companies. Its Company E, 19th Texas Cavalry, served in Parsons' Brigade--which fought over 20 engagements in three years with considerable distinction. (1964)

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