Inscription
From pack trails and wagon roads that marked this area at least 300 years, have developed such modern roads as U.S. Highway 181. The old trails of Indians, wild cattle and mustang horses formed highways for 17th, 18th and 19th century expeditions coming from Mexico to claim sovereignty for Spain over land of Texas.
When pioneers established land grants in this section, they also found Indian trails useful, placing towns along them. Beeville, the county seat, was situated at the natural intersection of San Patricio-Helena Road with Goliad-Laredo Road. About 20 miles south, the Matamoros-Goliad road ("Camino Real" to old-timbers) was probably the most historic road in this area.
In the years 1861-1865 the "cotton road"--called "lifeline of the southern Confederacy"--crossed Bee County. A later route of great value was a cattle trail that channeled thousands of Longhorns from the Rio Grande to the Red River and up the Dodge City Trail or the Chisholm Trail to northern markets.
In this area were also La Para (or Grapevine) Road; the Indianola-Papalote Road; and a road to now vanished St. Mary's, a port on Copano Bay, off the Gulf of Mexico. (1968)
Location
Sources
More markers in Bee
Aransas Creek Settlers
Skidmore, TX
Earliest known residents were Karankawa Indians who named creek.
Bee County
Pettus, TX
1936 plate: Created a county largely from San Patricio in 1857 Organized in 1858.
Beeville on the Poesta
Beeville, TX
Long before Mexico granted land (1834) on Poesta Creek to the first settlers, Anne Burke and James Heffernan, savage Indians roamed this...
Captain A.C. Jones
Beeville, TX
One of builders of Southwest.
Mc Clanahan House
Beeville, TX
Oldest business structure in Beeville, erected about 1867 on east side of courthouse square, near Poesta Creek.
