Site of J. Light Townsend Homestead
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Marker Text: Pioneers Asa and Rebecca Townsend came to the Republic of Texas in February 1838 and were granted 649 acres in Colorado County. Their son James Light Townsend (1845-1894) and his second wife, Margaret Alica Cummins, made their first home on a farm about three miles from Columbus. There they had a son, who died young, and a daughter Lumpien Elma, born in 1870. They moved to Columbia a few years later. Living in a house built of a mottled concrete construction called tabby. This construction form, popular along the gulf coast, was widely used in Columbus in the 1850s by builder Stephen Harbert and his son, Andrew. Here three more Townsend children were born Elizabeth Rebecca, Margaret Lee and Howard Asa.
In 1880 James Light Townsend was elected sheriff and the family moved to the city jail. Two more children, Carrie Estelle and Jay Light Townsend , were born there.In 1890, they moved into another tabby house at this site, built for the Hicks family by Stephen Harbert in 1858. Then known as the Carlton house for the M.M. Carlton family, it became known as the Townsend house. James Light Townsend was reelected as sheriff six days before his death, but he was seriously ill at the time and never knew it. He died in the Townsend house in November 1894. the property remained in the family after Margaret Cummin's Townsend's death, and in 1933 the heirs sold the site to Columbus School board. The board designated it Townsend playground; when the house was razed to make was for an athletic field, an arch was fashioned from the columns on the front porch to commemorate it. The arch itself was destroyed in the mid-1940s, but the Townsend legacy remained prominent in Columbus. Supplemental Plate; Townsend playground site marker sponsors are great-granddaughters Virginia Stafford Quinn and Jo Lou Stafford Parks. (1999) |
Marker No: 15365
Aluminum 27 x 42 Subject Marker
Geographic: N 29° 42.148 W 096° 32.436
Location: Milam Street. In front of the Columbus Elementary School playground.