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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2AQJ_corpus-christi_Corpus-Christi-TX.html
Near here on August 16 and 18, 1862, three Confederate artillery pieces held off four attacking Federal ships during the Civil War bombardment of Corpus Christi. The blockading squadron of Lieutenant J.W. Kittredge, U.S.N., had harassed the sou…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM28C6_site-of-kinneys-trading-post_Corpus-Christi-TX.html
Henry L. Kinney, born in Pennsylvania in June 1814, came to this area about 1858 and established a fort-like trading post (across Broadway). The building, enclosed by a stockade, contained his home, store, and quarters for armed men. The bulk of K…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM28C5_centennial-house_Corpus-Christi-TX.html
Forbes Britton (1812-1861), a Virginian and graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, came to Corpus Christi as an army captain in Mexican War, 1846. He returned as a civilian, and with his wife Rebecca (Millard) had this classical revival house buil…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM28C4_gold-star-court-of-honor_Corpus-Christi-TX.html
The Corpus Christi Gold Star Court of Honor pays tribute to the mothers of the servicemen of Nueces County killed during World War I (1914-1918). Incorporated into the existing Spohn Park, part of the Broadway Bluff improvements completed in 1916,…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM28C3_corpus-christi-cathedral-site_Corpus-Christi-TX.html
This site and the Corpus Christi Cathedral property were donated to the Diocese by the Kenedy family in 1938. Construction of the Cathedral started in 1939 and it was dedicated in 1940. The former Kenedy home, located where the Cathedral now sits…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM28BP_capitan-blas-maria-de-la-garza-falcon_Corpus-Christi-TX.html
(front side) Friendship Monument Linking the Cultures of Spain * Mexico * United States In 1746, King Felipe V of Spain, concerned the French would try to claim and settle the Gulf Plains from the Nueces River to Tampico, proclaimed the ar…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM28B0_broadway-bluff-improvement_Corpus-Christi-TX.html
This 40-foot bluff became a distinctive border between uptown and downtown as Corpus Christi experienced rapid growth after 1900. With the encouragement of Mayor Roy Miller, New York engineer Alexander Potter began designing improvements to the Bl…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM289U_the-lone-star-fair_Corpus-Christi-TX.html
Henry L. Kinney (b. 1814), founder of Corpus Christi, began by October 1851 to organize the Lone Star Fair to boost local economy. The fair was publicized to attract new settlers to the area, but was a thinly-veiled attempt to recruit men for the …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM2826_robstown-record_Robstown-TX.html
The Robstown Record began serving the Robstown community and surrounding areas in 1919, when M.L. Dale and his wife, Myrtle, began to print the paper. At the time, Robstown did not have a newspaper; the community's first new periodical, the Robsto…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM280U_george-h-paul-building-site_Robstown-TX.html
Robstown began in 1903 at the merger point of the Texas-Mexican and the St. Louis, Brownsville and Mexico Railroads. The town grew rapidly after the arrival of land developer George H. Paul. He organized the George H. Paul Land Co., acquired about…
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