Details for Ephraim Merrill Daggett

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5439001490

Data

Marker Number 1490
Atlas Number 5439001490
Marker Title Ephraim Merrill Daggett
Index Entry Daggett, Ephraim Merrill
Address 9th and Houston St.
City Fort Worth
County Tarrant
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 656557
UTM Northing 3624952
Subject Codes state official; Civil War; Business topics, general; pioneers; military topics
Marker Year 1993
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Corner of 9th & Houston, Ft. Worth
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Canadian born Ephraim Merrill Daggett was reared on a farm in Indiana. He traded with the Indians at Fort Dearborn (Chicago) in the early 1830s then moved to Shelby County, Republic of Texas, in 1838. There he and his family became involved in the East Texas Regulator-Moderator feud (1839-1844). He later served as a Captain in the Mexican War of 1846. While serving as State Legislator from Shelby County (1851-53), he established a mercantile business and a hotel in the frontier town of Fort Worth. In 1854 he moved his family here and soon thereafter began purchasing large tracts of Tarrant County real estate. Daggett used his influence as a former legislator to help secure Fort Worth's selection as County Seat in 1860. After serving as Brigadier General during the Civil War, he engaged in the mercantile and cattle business in Fort Worth. In 1873 Daggett's likeness was chosen to adorn the City's first seal. His role in bringing the Texas & Pacific Railroad here in 1876, developing a downtown district, and in helping transform Fort Worth from an abandoned military post to a center of commerce earned Daggett reknown as "The Father of Fort Worth". He is buried in the City's Pioneer's Cemetery. (1993)

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