Details for Audubon
Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5497000233
Data
| Marker Number | 233 |
| Atlas Number | 5497000233 |
| Marker Title | Audubon |
| Index Entry | Audubon |
| Address | N of intersection of CR 2585 and 2675 |
| City | Alvord |
| County | Wise |
| UTM Zone | 14 |
| UTM Easting | 628752 |
| UTM Northing | 3695430 |
| Subject Codes | cities and towns; ghost towns |
| Marker Year | 1970 |
| Recorded Texas Historic Landmark | No |
| Marker Location | From Alvord, take CR 2585 about 5 miles northeast, turn north on CR 2675 and continue about .25 mile to marker. Replacement marker; original in Wise County Museum in Decatur. |
| Private Property | No |
| Marker Condition | In Situ |
| Marker Size | 27" x 42" |
| Marker Text | A vanished town which was important in this area in the 19th century. It was settled by southerners and named for naturalist John J. Audubon (1785-1851). Earliest settler, D. D. Shirey, platted town out of his farm land in 1865. He and his wife, "Aunt Polly", expanded their log house into a stagecoach inn that grew famous for a lavish table. Their excellent food was set out on a lazy Susan, which was the wonder of the countryside. In the late 1860s and following decades, trail crews detoured from the cattle trail that ran to the east of here and bought supplies in the town. Audubon had a post office from June 25, 1874, to July 20, 1904. Local social and fraternal bodies included Woodmen of the World and a Masonic Lodge active from 1879 to 1886. There were three churches, a school, a telephone office, two cotton gins, several mercantile stores, several lawyers and physicians, and two blacksmiths. The noted Dr. W. B. Palmer, had a beautiful country home, "Gynndome". Bypassed by the Fort Worth & Denver Railroad in 1883, Audubon gradually declined. Post office closed in 1904; school consolidated with Alvord in 1930. Among outstanding native sons was the Reverend M. M. Barnett of the California Baptist Foundation. |