Details for James O. Rice

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5491009327

Data

Marker Number 9327
Atlas Number 5491009327
Marker Title James O. Rice
Index Entry Rice, James O.
Address FM 1660
City Coupland
County Williamson
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 647932
UTM Northing 3372965
Subject Codes county official; Texas Revolution, Republic of Texas; pioneers; military topics
Marker Year 1977
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Rice's Crossing community, SE corner FM 1660 and FM 973
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (1815 - about 1875) South Carolina-born James O. Rice migrated to Texas by 1835 and served in the Texas Army during the War for Independence. In early days of the Republic of Texas, he protected frontier settlements as part of a Texas Ranger company. On May 17, 1839, in command of a volunteer force clashing with Mexican troops led by Manuel Flores on the North San Gabriel River, Rice captured vitally important documents related to the Cordova Rebellion against the Republic of Texas. He joined the Somervell and Mier Expeditions of 1842 and the Snively Expedition of 1843. He also served in the Mexican War (1846-48). For military services, he received several bounties of land. When Williamson County was created in 1848, Rice was one of the commissioners named to select a site for the county seat. One of the county's largest landowners, Rice built his home on Brushy Creek about one mile west of here at a site then known as Blue Hill and later called Rice's Crossing. He ran a store and was postmaster of Blue Hill post office, 1849-57. For a short time, he had a tanyard in Georgetown. Rice married Nancy D. Gilliland (d. 1860), of an early Texas family. The couple had four daughters. Rice is buried in the Sneed Family Cemetery near Austin. (1977)

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