Details for 1848 Denton County Seat

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507018510

Data

Marker Number 18510
Atlas Number 5507018510
Marker Title 1848 Denton County Seat
Index Entry 1848 Denton County Seat
Address 1960 Post Oak Dr.
City Corinth
County Denton
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 679168
UTM Northing 3669420
Subject Codes counties; communities; land development
Marker Year 2016
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Post Oak Dr., E side 180 feet N. of Creekside Dr.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Originally part of the Republic of Texas’ Fannin County, Denton County was established in 1846, when the first legislature of the State of Texas created and organized thirty-one new counties. Efforts to colonize the area eventually resulted in Denton becoming the county seat in 1857. Before Denton the county had three other seats. In 1846, Pinckneyville was established in the geographic center of the county, however, many early settlers were located further southeast. The seat was moved in 1848 to the first Alton, which was on a ridge between present-day Pecan and Hickory Creeks, four miles south of Denton, near Corinth. The name was chosen by early settlers, brothers Enoch and Lorenzo Moore, who were from Alton, Illinois. William Creth Baines, the only resident of the town of Alton, used his home as the legal Denton County Seat. A post office was established in 1848, with Stephen A. Venters as the first postmaster. A well was dug at the site of the first Alton but was dry. Because of the problems associated with the lack of water, the town was moved in 1851 to the area of the residence of Alexander E. Cannon on Hickory Creek. This second Alton is now known as Old Alton. The new site drew water from nearby Hickory Creek and by 1855, had at least two stores, a post office and a hotel. In 1857, on the behest of citizens who were unhappy with the progress of Alton, the county seat was moved to a more central location in present-day Denton. Denton County voters accepted an offer from Hiram Cisco, William Loving and William Woodruff to provide 100 acres of property for a new county seat. The new town, near the center of the county, was named Denton in 1857. Nearby is the supposed site of the dry well of the first Alton site. (2016)

Location Map

View this record in full map (opens in new tab/window)