Details for William Letchworth Hurst

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5439005836

Data

Marker Number 5836
Atlas Number 5439005836
Marker Title William Letchworth Hurst
Index Entry Hurst, William Letchworth
Address 841 W. Pipeline Rd.
City Hurst
County Tarrant
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 669442
UTM Northing 3633138
Subject Codes military topics; Civil War; cities and towns; land development; railroads
Marker Year 1981
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Heritage Village Plaza, S side W. Pipeline Rd. 0.2 mi. W of Precinct Line Rd.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (1833-1922) A native of Tennessee, William Letchworth "Uncle Billy" Hurst (1833-1922) served in the Confederate army during the Civil War. As a member of the Sixty-First Tennessee Infantry, he was involved in fighting near Vicksburg, Mississippi. Following the surrender of his unit to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant in 1863, and his subsequent release, he joined in the reorganization of his outfit as the Sixty-First Tennessee Mounted Infantry. Captured in December 1863 near Tazewell, Tennessee, Hurst spent the remainder of the war in military prisons in Kentucky and Illinois. In 1870 Hurst and his wife Mary (Lynch) (1835-1908) joined other residents of Claiborne County, Tennessee, who had migrated to Texas. By adding property to his first land purchase in 1872, Hurst became a prominent land speculator in the area. In 1903 he granted a right-of-way across his farm for the construction of a Rock Island rail line. In exchange, the company named a rail stop and depot for him. Later it became the town of Hurst. Honored for many years by his friends and relatives with festive birthday celebrations, Hurst was the father of 14 children and had over 100 grandchildren. Many family descendants still live in the area. (1981)

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