Inscription
What began as smoke signals from hill to hill evolved into lines on poles. The telegraph was introduced in the United States in the mid-1800s and many cities in Texas began constructing lines and stations. New Braunfels opened its first telegraph station in the 1860s at the Guadalupe Hotel. August Schmitz (1830–1894) operated as a telegrapher in the hotel until 1871 when the office moved to his home on Mill Street.
Schmitz was a schoolteacher and spoke German and English. The mid-1800s house is of half-timber, or fachwerk, style with mud bricks made from Comal Creek. The office was located there until 1879 when it was moved back to the hotel and then to the railroad depot in 1881.
Location
Sources
More markers in Comal
August Dietz Cottage
New Braunfels, TX
August Dietz came to Texas in 1849 as a German immigrant, and settled in New Braunfels.
Comal County Courthouse
New Braunfels, TX
In 1846 Comal County held its first court session in the home of its county clerk, Conrad Seabaugh.
Comal County, C.S.A.
New Braunfels, TX
Manufacturing and supply center in Civil War.
Faust Hotel
New Braunfels, TX
First known as the Travelers Hotel, this inn was completed in 1929 with 63 guest rooms and reflected the thriving economy of the New...
First Patented Wire Fence
New Braunfels, TX
[Special fence design at top of inscription] Virgina native William H. Meriwether (b. 1800), an early Comal County plantation owner, ran...
