Historical Marker Search

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KC4_benito-juarez_San-Antonio-TX.html
As one of the creators of modern Mexico, President Juarez led the separation of church and state and the resistance against French imperial designs. He also promoted new economic development.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBW_la-villita_San-Antonio-TX.html
La Villita, "The Little Village", settled about 1722 as "The Town of the Alamo". Here General Martin de Perfecto Cos signed the Articles of Capitulation to Texians December 11, 1835 and General Santa Anna's artillery battery fi…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBV_bombach-house-and-store_San-Antonio-TX.html
Otto Bombach, a carpenter, built this combination house and store in 1856 before moving to Mexico. His wife lived here and managed the property until it was sold in 1869. Victor Bracht, author of Texas in 1848, lived here briefly, and in 1874, Hen…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBT_articles-of-capitulation_San-Antonio-TX.html
In this place General Cos signed articles capitulating to the Texans who under Milam and Johnson took San Antonio Dec. 9, 1835.
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBS_naming-of-san-antonio_San-Antonio-TX.html
This marker commemorates the 275th anniversary of the naming of the site that became the city of San Antonio. On the feast of St. Anthony of Padua, June 13, 1691, Padre Damian Massanet, Franciscan missionary and Governor Don Domingo Teran, lead…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBQ_the-dashiell-house_San-Antonio-TX.html
Colonel Jeremiah Y. Dashiell, a physician who served as paymaster in the U.S.-Mexico War, bought this land on the San Antonio River in 1849. Dashiell was stationed in South Carolina in l856, when he sent his wife and daughter money and instruction…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBP_gray-guilbeau-house_San-Antonio-TX.html
José Amador was given this property by the Spanish Government in 1817. His heirs sold it to P.L. Buquor in 1847. Later that year, James Gray bought the land and built this house, which he sold to French consul Francois Guilbeau in 1853. Ano…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBO_losana-house_San-Antonio-TX.html
Mariano Romano Losana bought this land in 1859, and probably built this house soon afterward. It was purchased by Rafael Lopez in l866 and sold again in 1871, when the deed referred to "the house, out houses, fences and all other improvements…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBN_bowen-kirchner-house_San-Antonio-TX.html
Margarita Perez de Rodriguez, consort of Compana de Béxar soldier Jose Antonio Rodriguez, was given this land "in satisfaction of her constitutional allowance." She sold the property in 1851 to San Antonio postmaster John Bowen, who conveye…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM1KBL_st-philips-college_San-Antonio-TX.html
St. Philip's College was begun in an adobe house just north of this building in 1898. Originally a parochial day school, it grew into a grammar and industrial school with a boarding department. This two-story brick building was constructed by the …
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