Historical Marker Search

You searched for Postal Code: 75847

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMJPL_community-of-coltharp_Kennard-TX.html
By the late 1850s Eli Coltharp lived beside Cochina Bayou. He opened a store and post office on the stage route west of Nacogdoches. The farm area called Coltharp Hill boasted a gin, gristmill, blacksmith and millinery shops. A school building hou…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMJPK_hagerville-community_Kennard-TX.html
Kentuckian James Henry Hager (1822-1879) and his wife Naoma (Clark) came to Texas in the 1840s. Hager, a farmer and cabinet maker, opened a blacksmith shop and mill in Houston County. The Nacogdoches-to-Navasota stage and mail road ran beside his …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMJPJ_first-baptist-church-of-kennard_Kennard-TX.html
In October 1903, approximately fourteen men and women organized the First Baptist Church of Kenard. The congregation selected four trustees: Dr. T.M. Sherman, George W. Willis, M.B. Matchett and Hugh P. English, who served the church in many capac…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMJP8_kennard_Kennard-TX.html
The town of Kennard was founded in 1903 by the Louisiana and Texas Lumber Company and platted on 160 acres. Land agent Alexander McTavish also acted as Kennard's first postmaster. The town served as a terminus for the Eastern Texas Railroad, a lin…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMJP7_former-rosenwald-school_Kennard-TX.html
A symbol of Black America's pride in education, plus crusade of Julius Rosenwald (1862-1932), a Chicagoan who in 1913 began to fund school buildings for Negroes. By 1920, when this one-teacher structure was built at Ratcliff (4 miles east), Rosenw…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMJOM_four-c-mill_Kennard-TX.html
R.M. Keith, agent for Central Coal & Coke., Kansas City, Mo., in Oct. 1899., began purchasing the virgin pine timberlands of this region. Lumber for construction of a new mill was cut by a small sawmill bought by Keith, Jan. 10, 1901, from local l…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMJMT_ratcliff-ccc-camp_Kennard-TX.html
J.H. Ratcliff's 1880s sawmill and village here gave way to major timber industry operations that by the early 1930s had decimated Houston County's densest virgin forest. As part of federal efforts to restore the nation's natural resources, Civilia…
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