Details for Central National Road of the Republic of Texas

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5397006136

Data

Marker Number 6136
Atlas Number 5397006136
Marker Title Central National Road of the Republic of Texas
Index Entry Central National Road of the Republic of Texas
Address 1111 E. Yellow Jacket Lane
City Rockwall
County Rockwall
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 738591
UTM Northing 3644656
Subject Codes roads
Marker Year 1977
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Rockwall County Courthouse grounds
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text In an effort to improve overland transportation, the Republic of Texas Congress authorized the Central National Road in Feb. 1844. The roadway was to be 30 feet wide and cleared of stumps over 12 inches high. A survey team led by Major George W. Stell platted the route from near the mouth of Elm Fork on the Trinity River in present downtown Dallas, northeast to Kiomatia on the Red River. The highway linked a road leading south to Austin and San Antonio with a U.S. military highway extending north to St. Louis from Fort Towson in present Oklahoma. Running east from Dallas, the Central National Road turned northeast to cross the area that is now Rockwall County. Portions of FM 740, known locally as Ridge Road, follow the historic route. The earliest Rockwall County pioneers settled near the road about 1846. Sterling R. Barnes located his homestead about two miles south of the present site of Rockwall, and John O. Heath settled near the crossing of the East Fork of the Trinity River. The towns of Heath, originally named "Black Hill" and later "Willow Springs," and Rockwall, the county seat, were founded along the highway. (1977)

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