Inscription
(1830-1903) Before migrating to Texas, A. J. Rose made a fortune in the 1849 California Gold Rush. In 1857 he and his wife Sallie (Austin) brought their family from Missouri to Travis County, Texas. Later they settled in San Saba County, where Rose ran a mill and started a school. He served in the local militia, took part in frontier Indian battles, and was a Confederate Army Major.
In 1870 Rose moved to Salado. At this site he built a two-story home where his 11 children grew up. A successful and progressive farmer, Rose sought ways to improve farming methods. When the first local Grange in Texas began in Salado in 1873, he joined the farmers' group. Later that year he helped organize the statewide Grange which became a strong legislative lobby for land and tax laws protecting farmers and for improved schools.
As Worthy Master of the Grange, Rose led in beginning cooperatives, textile mills, and a fire insurance company. An advocate for better schools and teachers, Rose served on local school boards, as a trustee of Salado College, and present Mary Hardin-Baylor College in Belton. He was appointed to the Board of Directors at Texas A&M University in 1887 and served as president of the board.
He was buried in Salado Cemetery. (1979)
Location
Sources
More markers in Bell
Second Armored Division, U. S. Army
Killeen, TX
Gen. Patton's "Hell on Wheels," the 2nd Armored Division, United States Army Formed to meet 20th century challenges, this force includes...
42nd Reunion of Hood's Texas Brigade
Temple, TX
Honored the late General John B. Hood, for whom Fort Hood was named.
A Memorial to Civil War Education in Texas
Belton, TX
Baylor University (including the "Female Department" later to become Mary Hardin-Baylor) had operated at Independence for 15 years before...
Old Anderson Place
Salado, TX
Built 1860 at edge of an old Indian campground, by James B. Anderson, one of town's founders and a school trustee in Salado.
Bell County
Belton vicinity, TX
Settlement began on Lampasas River, 1847.
