Montague County, Texas March 31, 1872, W.A. and Arch Johnson, brothers, about 18 and 13 years of age respectively, who lived on Denton Creek, about two miles northwest of Denver, in Montague County, went over to the home of Fred Broadstreet, to get...
Markers (click on a topic to jump to that section.) Brushy Mound | Butterfield Overland Stage Line Crossing | Forestburg | Head of Elm (Saint Jo) | Highways Paved With Gold | McGrady Cemetery | Montague Cemetery | Montague County | Montague County...
Montague County, Texas During 1870, Red River Station, in Montague County, was a town of about 100 houses, and perhaps, a half-dozen stores. Like other villages on the frontier, it was a log-cabin-town. Mrs. Susan Herring was living in the edge of...
Montague County, Texas D.S. and Marion Hagler were camped under a large post oak tree about one mile north of Forrestburg in Montague County, early in June, 1858. They had thirty-five horses staked in the flats nearby; two saddles hanging over their...
Cooke County, Texas Montague County, Texas Wise County, Texas Gainesville to Decatur More Stories and Information on Fort Tours Road Trips Saint Jo has a marker on the south side of the square describing the significance of the town's location at...
Montague County, Texas These two boys, about twelve years of age, were herding cattle just after noon, near their home in Montague County, when some Indians ran up and roped them. This occurred about twenty miles southeast of Montague, and the...
Chambers/Visitors Bureaus: Bowie | Montague | Nocona | Saint Jo | Spanish Fort Uncommemorated Sites from North to South Mrs. Sarah Ann Walker | Sad Experience of Mrs. Susan Herring | W.A. Morris and Others Fight Indians Near Red River Station | Big...
Montague County, Texas During January of 1870, W.A. (Bud) Morris and Holloway Williams, were going from Forestburg to Montague. When they were within five miles of their destination, these citizens discovered a fresh Indian trail going east, and...
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