San Jacinto Historical Markers
NUMBER OF MARKERS IN COUNTY- 33
County seat is Coldspring. San Jacinto County is named for the Battle of San Jacinto. A county in the Piney Woods Region it is green and lush to drive through. We managed to capture the marjory of the marker being that in square miles it is a smaller county. The ones missing are on private property and require more time than we had on this day. We appreciate the owners of the Robert Tod Robinson House for allowing us to take pictures of the house and marker but for also showing us the family museum which had some artifacts of an earlier and darker time including slave shackles. These artifacts were found on the property as the land was worked and preserved as they were dug up. The Big Thicket, C.S.A. marker was not in the roadside park as noted by the Texas Historical atlas and I wrote to the The San Jacinto historical commission as to what may have happened to it or if there are any plans to replace but at the time of writing have yet to receive a response.
Coldspring Methodist Church
Evergreen United Methodist Church
First Baptist Church of Coldspring
General James Davis
George Thomas Wood
Governor George Tyler Wood
Governor George Tyler Wood
Harrell Plantation Cemetery
Isaac Jones
J. M. Hansbro's Law Office
Laurel Hill Cemetery
McClanahan-Trapp House
Mount Capers Cemetery
Mount Moriah Lodge No. 37 A. F. & A. M.
Mount Zion Cemetery
Near Site of Coushatta Indian Village
Oakhurst Center Hill Church and Cemetery
Oakwood Cemetery
Old San Jacinto County Jail
Old Waverly
Pine Valley Cemetery and Missionary Baptist Church
San Jacinto County
San Jacinto County Courthouse
San Jacinto County Jail
Shepherd Methodist Church
Site of Council Hill
Site of Raven Hill
Site of the Home of George Thomas Wood
The Big Thicket, C.S.A.
The Robert Tod Robinson House
Town of Shepherd
Townsite of Coldspring
William Rolfe Kelley and Dinah Rush