Inscription
(1801-1865) A native of Louisiana, Abraham Winfree first came to present Orange County in 1830. He purchased land by 1831, and in 1833 brought his wife Millie and their five children to Texas. Their homestead on Cow Bayou was near the Opelousas Trail (La Bahia Road), an important early Texas travel route.
Winfree made his living as a rancher, cattle drover, shingle maker, and logger. The Winfree home was the site of an election in November 1836 in which Claiborne West was elected to represent local citizens in the Congress of the Republic of Texas. The following year, Winfree was appointed county commissioner for his precinct.
Eventually, the community that grew up in this area became known as Winfree. Abraham Winfree died in 1865 and was buried on his homestead in the same family graveyard where his wife Millie was interred. He requested that no stone be placed on his grave, and it remains unmarked. The cemetery became known as Winfree No. 1 after another family graveyard was established in the area.
Winfree descendants continue to reside in Orange County. The community which still bears his name is testimony to the life of this pioneer Texas settler. (1992)
Location
Sources
More markers in Orange
The Emmett Beuhler House
Orange, TX
Emmett Beuhler (1853-1943), a native of Alsace-Lorraine, came here in the 1880s, during the lumbering boom.
Dr. Samuel M. Brown
Orange, TX
(1836-1887) South Carolina native Samuel M. Brown served with distinction as a surgeon in the Confederate army during the Civil War.
John Cole Homestead
Mauriceville, TX
Pioneer settler John Cole (1805-75) migrated to Texas in 1828.
Site of End of the Line Station
Orange, TX
The original charter for a rail line through the Orange area was granted to the Sabine and Galveston Railroad and Lumber Company in 1856.
First National Bank of Orange
Orange, TX
Until the industrial revolution reached Orange in the late 1880s, most banking needs in the area were handled through Galveston.
