Inscription
An active place during the Civil War, Austin was the site of the secession convention, March 2, 1861, and legislative sessions which lasted until June 1865. City visitors during the early 1860s included lobbyists, cotton speculators, military leaders, and businessmen seeking to aid the war effort. Five stage lines and a pony express to the railhead at Brenham provided communications.
Also located here was the Texas Military Board, an agency created to obtain arms and munitions for 33 militia districts. A city arsenal was set up on Waller Creek in southeast Austin. A gun cap factory in the old Land Office on 11th street made 14,000 shells a day, and a foundry produced guns and cannon.
Factories for shoes and gunpowder, and a sewing room in the basement of the capitol, furnished good for the Confederate army. The city also maintained a military fort. During the war citizens endured Indian raids, epidemics of fever and diphtheria, rumors of slave uprisings, and a scarcity of food.
Hotels refused room and board, even to state legislators, unless payment was made in gold, silver, or goods such as nails and tobacco. As a result, some lawmakers lived in their wagons and cooked over open fires.
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More markers in Travis
George W. Sampson Home
Austin, TX
Former confederate Army Captain and leading Austin merchant George W.Sampson (1825-88), Married Mary Goodwin Hall (b.1845), niece of Gov....
State Bar of Texas
Austin, TX
On July 15, 1882, a volunteer organization of Texas attorneys known as the Texas Bar Association, was established in Galveston, with...
Third Site for Travis County Government
Austin, TX
Courthouse built here in 1939, 91st year of Travis County, which in early Texas was in municipality of Mina (later Bastrop), or Travis...
Ira Hobart Evans
Austin, TX
(April 11, 1844 - April 19, 1922) Born in New Hampshire, Ira H.Evans grew up in Vermont.
Hirshfeld Cottage
Austin, TX
German native Henry Hirshfeld (1834-1911) migrated to the United States at the age of fifteen.
