Inscription
This native stone, dug from the Trinity River Valley, marks the route of the Eastern Cattle Trail, where cattle were driven north on Rusk Street, now Commerce Street, through the City of Fort Worth, Texas, to the bluff and then across the Trinity River to the broad valley below, where they rested before continuing their long drive north.
From the end of the Civil War to the bringing of the railroad in 1876, great herds of cattle passed this way to Abilene, Kansas. The Eastern Trail, also called the McCoy Trail, became the Chisholm Trail when it reached the Red River. Fort Worth, the last place for provisions before Indian Country, received its name, 'Cow Town', and it first major industry, from this period.
Location
Sources
More markers in Tarrant
Bransford
Colleyville, TX
A post office with the name Bransford opened in this vicinity in the late 19th century.
Camp Bowie in World War I
Headquarters, 36th Division, United States Army, 1917-1919.
Coliseum
Until 1908, The Annual Fort Worth Fat Stock Show was held in a variety of locations.
Dr. Lilburn Howard Colley
Colleyville, TX
A veteran of the Union Army during the Civil War, Dr. L. H. Colley (1843-1924) and his wife, Martha Sabrina (Fowks) (1860-1914), migrated...
Elisha Adam Euless
Euless, TX
Elisha Adam Euless (1848-1911) migrated to Texas in 1867 from Bedford county, Tennessee and settled in Tarrant county.
