Details for Ottmar von Behr

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507018090

Data

Marker Number 18090
Atlas Number 5507018090
Marker Title Ottmar von Behr
Index Entry von Behr, Ottmar
Address 1022 Sisterdale Road (1376)
City Sisterdale
County Kendall
UTM Zone
UTM Easting
UTM Northing
Subject Codes county official; counties
Marker Year 2015
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location On Highway 1376 - 3/10 of a mile south of the Guadalupe River, 1022 Sisterdale Road (1376)
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text Ottmar Von Behr had an influence on German immigration before bringing his family to Texas in 1848. Having toured America in 1846, he published an imigrant’s guide, suggesting the life of a Texas farmer. Although Ottmar was a son of nobility in Germany, he left to farm and raise sheep in Texas. German immigrants were moving to Texas with professional credentials and degrees to seek new freedoms. Ottmar and his neighbors brought with them a distinguished collection of books and a passion for intellectual freedom, attributes that led to the creation of a Latin Colony. The Sisterdale Region was not a platted community, but a series of large farms populated by German immigrants who left behind prestigious recognition in Germany to take up farming. Ottmar was the second regional pioneer to settle in Guadalupe Valley by the Old Pinta Trail. Thus, his entry in 1848 gave him second settler status in future Blanco County (1858) and Kendall County (1862). Ottmar was also responsible for the naming of Sisterdale. He suggested changing the Sisty’s Creeks to Sister Creeks and put Sisterdale on the map when he petitioned for a post office in 1851 and was appointed first postmaster. He was elected justice of the peace in 1851. Ottmar was known for his social skills, hosting visitors, guests and travelers. Ottmar had returned to Germany in 1855 when the Sisterdale Petition was signed to create a new county so his wife, Louise Behr, signed for him. Ottmar never returned to Texas; he died on his return trip back to America. Ottmar only lived in Sisterdale for seven years, but he left a lasting legacy.

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