Inscription
John Davis Bradburn (1787-1842) was born in Virginia and reared in Kentucky. He entered Mexico in 1817 with Francisco Mina's army to help upset Spanish colonial forces in the War of Independence. He became a naturalized Mexican citizen and in 1821 married into an aristocratic family. Bradburn hired Henry Austin to operate a steamboat on the Rio Grande in 1828.
Best known as the Mexican commander at the Anahuac disturbances in 1830-32, he was promoted to general in 1832, and died in 1842. The exact location of his grave is unknown; he reportedly is buried on the hill nearby. (1996)
Location
Sources
More markers in Hidalgo
Chimney Park_Site of Mission Canal Co. Pumping Plant
Mission, TX
In 1907, John J. Conway and James W. Hoit began the Mission Canal Co. Irrigation System, which was instrumental in the early agricultural...
El Horcon Tract and Rio Rico
Mercedes, TX
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo which ended the Mexican War (1846-48) designated the main channel of the Rio Grande as the Mexico-U.S....
El Sal del Rey, C.S.A.
Edinburg, TX
Front side: Large salt lake located 26 miles northeast was principal source of salt in South Texas during the Civil War.
Former Station Site of Spiderweb Railroad
Progreso, TX
The agricultural boom that marked the early development of this area was due in large part to the San Benito & Rio Grande Valley Railroad.
Gregg Wood Home
Mission, TX
David Gregg Wood, Sr. (1876-1965) originally came to the Valley in 1893 and settled in Mission in 1908.
