Details for San Augustine

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5405007637

Data

Marker Number 7637
Atlas Number 5405007637
Marker Title San Augustine
Index Entry San Augustine
Address 611 W. Columbia St.
City San Augustine
County San Augustine
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 393894
UTM Northing 3489037
Subject Codes governors; counties; Texas Revolution, Republic of Texas; state official
Marker Year 1966
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location San Augustine County Chamber of Commerce
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text An early eastern gate to Texas, in area claimed in 1600s by both France and Spain. To back her claim, Spain in 1691 chartered from Mexico past this site El Camino Real (The King's Highway) and established nearby in 1717 Mission Dolores de los Aies. Inhabited by Ayish Indians and Spaniards until the late 1790s, when Richard Sims came and was soon followed by John Quinalty, Edmond Quirk and families of Broocks, Cullens, Cartwrights, Hortons, Hustons, Prathers and others. By 1824 the settlement had a water mill to grind corn meal; in 1826, a cotton gin. In the 1827 Battle of Ayish Bayou, Col. Prather and 69 men put down Fredonian uprising over land titles. The town was laid off in 1833 by Thomas McFarland. In 1836 it sent as delegates to sign Declaration of Independence S. W. Blount and E. O. LeGrand; fielded 3 companies to fight in the War for Independence. Its Republic of Texas statesmen included vice-president K. L. Anderson; J. A. Greer, Secretary of the Treasury; Wm. Holman, Congressman; J. Pinckney Henderson, Minister to England and France, and later the first Governor of the state. Oran M. Roberts was 16th governor. Home of the 1965 United States Ambassador to Australia Edward Clark. Many historic sites are marked. (1966)

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