Inscription
Located on land originally included in a land grant to Texas War for Independence veteran Thomas H. Cosby, the town of Roby was first platted in 1885. The land was purchased by D. C. and M. L. Roby of Mississippi, relatives of Cosby's second wife, Martha. The Robys hired Walton, Hill, and Walton, a Travis County law firm, to represent their interests, and instructed the attorneys to organize a town to be named county seat of Fisher County.
On behalf of their clients, the attorneys donated land for churches, schools, a park, and a cemetery. Town lots were also given to settlers who would build homes within ninety days. In an election held in April 1886, Roby was declared the county seat. The first county court was held in a shed behind the V. H. Anderson House, which served as the town's first post office.
A frame courthouse was built on the southwest corner of the town square and was replaced over the years by a succession of other structures. Schools, churches, and businesses were established as settlement in the town increased. Retaining its small town atmosphere, Roby remains a center of commerce for Fisher County.
(1989)
Location
Sources
More markers in Fisher
Fisher County
Roby, TX
Sites of old Indian trail from Mexico to settlements on Texas frontier.
Organization of Fisher County
Roby, TX
When the Texas Legislature created Fisher County in 1876, there were no permanent settlements in the area.
Rotan
Rotan, TX
First known as White Flat, the town of Rotan was settled prior to the organization of Fisher County in 1886.
