Inscription
The main thoroughfare of early Texas, The Camino Real, or "King's Highway", followed ancient Indian and buffalo trail. It stretched 1,000 miles from Mexico to present Louisiana. Domingo Teran de los Rios, first Governor of Texas, blessed the central section of the road in 1691. Called the "Trail of the Padres", it linked Monclova, Mexico, with the Spanish Missions of East Texas.
Over the centuries, priests, soldiers, traders, and settlers used the Camino Real. The French adventurer T. Denis probably traveled the road from Lousiana to the Rio Grande in 1714. San Antonio was a major stop on this frontier highway. Moses Austin followed the Camino Real to San Antonio in 1820 seeking colonization rights from Spain.
Many Anglo-American settlers called it the "old San Antonio Road". It joined this city with Nacogdoches, San Augustine, and other East Texas Settlements. In 1915 the Texas Legislature appropriated $5,000 to mark the historic roadway across the state. The Daughters of the American Revolution, along with other patriotic groups, endorsed the project.
V.N. Zivley surveyed the route and indicated the spacing for granite markers every five miles. Today many modern highways follow the path of the Camino Real.
Location
Sources
More markers in Bexar
Acequia Madre de Valero (Main Irrigation Ditch of Valero Mission)
San Antonio, TX
(Main Irrigation Ditch of Valero Mission) One in a network of ditches begun by the Spanish and their Indian charges at the founding of...
Adina de Zavala
San Antonio, TX
As the granddaughter of Lorenzo de Zavala (1789-1836), first vice-president of the Republic of Texas, young Adina de Zavala was exposed...
Alamo Low Barracks and Main Gateway
San Antonio, TX
Mission San Antonio de Valero, established nearby in 1718, was relocated here in 1724.
Arsenal Magazine
San Antonio, TX
At the urging of United States Secretary of War Jefferson Davis, land was secured at San Antonio in 1858 for an arsenal.
In this vicinity the Battle of Rosillo
San Antonio, TX
In this vicinity the Battle of Rosillo was fought on March 28, 1813.
