You searched for City|State: leakey, tx
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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM23QT_leakey-cemetery_Leakey-TX.html
Originally known as the Floral Cemetery and serving an earlier community by that name, this cemetery dates to at least 1881. Land for the graveyard was sold by John and Nancy Leakey for one dollar and a cemetery plot.
The oldest documented buri…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM23QS_john-leakey_Leakey-TX.html
Tennessee native John Leakey (1824-1900) came to Texas in 1847, settling for a time in Henderson County where he was a brickmason and rancher. He and his wife Nancy (Patterson) moved to Uvalde County in 1852 near present day Sabinal. A desire to p…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM23QR_real-county_Leakey-TX.html
The location of Real County lies at the southern edge of the Edwards Plateau along the Balcones Escarpment, an area of rugged mountains and canyons named for the Frio, Sabinal and Nueces Rivers. The county line between Edwards County and Bandera C…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM23QQ_real-county_Leakey-TX.html
Located on the Edwards Plateau, Real County is in an area of rolling terrain broken by the canyons of the Frio River. Because of raids by Comanche, Apache, and Lipan Apache Indians, white settlement was hindered until after 1881. Mission San Loren…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM23QP_real-county-courthouse_Leakey-TX.html
Leakey was the county seat of Edwards County from 1883 to 1891 when a vote moved the seat to Rocksprings. Real County, named for businessman and State Senator Julius Real, was organized from parts of Edwards, Kerr and Bandera counties in April 191…