Details for William and Elisabeth Woody Homestead

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507019996

Data

Marker Number 19996
Atlas Number 5507019996
Marker Title William and Elisabeth Woody Homestead
Index Entry Woody, William and Elisabeth, Homestead
Address 7903 Old Springtown Rd.
City Springtown
County Parker
UTM Zone
UTM Easting
UTM Northing
Subject Codes
Marker Year 2018
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text William (Bill) Woody (1824-1915), one of the first Anglo settlers in Parker County, was born in Roane County, Tennessee. While living in the eastern Tennessee hills bordering North Carolina, he married Elisabeth Lydia Farmer (1822-1879) in 1846. In December 1846, six weeks after the birth of their son, the Woody family set out to Texas on foot with few possessions. Six months later, they arrived in Honey Grove in Fannin County where they met up with other family members and established a working farm. In 1851, the family traveled to White Settlement in Tarrant County where they stayed until their home was built here by 1855. Located in the Veal’s Station Community, the Woody family built a story-and-a-half, four-room dogtrot home using hand-sawn yellow pine lumber transported by ox from New Orleans. Once their house was complete, it served several distinct and important purposes for the Veal’s Station Community. The property was used as a refuge and stagecoach stop for pioneer travelers, a boarding house for college students attending Parsons College, and a community meeting place for all religious denominations in the area, as well as a cobbler’s workshop for hand-cobbled boots and shoes. In 1858, Bill Woody and community members built a two-story frame meeting house on the property which provided a church, masonic hall, town hall, common school, and later Parsons College, chartered in 1874, for the town of Veal’s Station. Elisabeth and Bill Woody are buried in the Veal’s Station Cemetery, both examples of rugged individualism that expanded the state and country in the nineteenth century.

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