Inscription
William Patrick Williams (ca. 1818-1898) and his wife Elizabeth (Boles) (ca. 1822-1899) migrated to Texas from Mississippi during the Civil War. After a brief stay in Cherokee County, they settled in this area, arriving by wagon train. Their nearby homestead became the nucleus of the neighboring rural settlement, the site of an early school they helped establish.
The Williamses and their six children survived many hardships, including Indian raids and a smallpox epidemic. William, often called "Mukewater Bill" for a stream near his home, was a pioneer area leader. (1981)
Location
Sources
More markers in Coleman
Camp Colorado, C.S.A.
Coleman, TX
Surrendered as U.S. outpost beginning Civil War.
Coleman County
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In early Texas had Apache, Comanche, Kiowa camps and mountain lookouts.
Coleman County Jail
Coleman, TX
Second county jail. (First was a small 1879 structure on lawn of courthouse.
Colonel James E. Mc Cord
Coleman, TX
1834-1914 South Carolinian.
Ruins of Camp Colorado
Coleman, TX
Originally established on the Colorado River by the United States Army as a protection for the frontier against hostile Indians; moved in...
