Inscription
The family of Henry Applewhite (1630-1704), who sailed from England to Jamestown, Virginia, in 1656, remained in Virginia for several generations. Applewhite's descendant, Thomas Applewhite, was born in North Carolina in 1791 and served as a sergeant in the War of 1812. In 1842 Thomas married his second wife, Elizabeth Oglesby (1820-1898).
The Applewhites, accompanied by eight slaves, moved to this area of Texas in 1853. They purchased 214 acres of farmland here in 1854 and by 1860 the Applewhites owned nine slaves, some of whom had taken the Applewhite name. According to local oral tradition, at one time the Applewhites' homestead may also have served as a brief stop for stagecoaches traversing the area along an alternate route of that part of the Chihuahua Road extending from Indianola to San Antonio.
Thomas (d. 1864) and Elizabeth Applewhite are buried in La Vernia in Concrete Cemetery. A number of Applewhite families, the descendants of African Americans who established homes here during the 1860s, remained in the area for many generations. Thomas and Elizabeth Applewhite's original stone house was mostly destroyed during highway construction in the 1950s.
Sesquicentennial of Texas Statehood 1845-1995
Location
Sources
More markers in Wilson
Brahan Lodge #226, A.F. & A.M.
La Vernia, TX
Set to work U.D. June 23, 1858.
James Charles Wilson
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When this county was created in 1860 by the Eighth Texas Legislature, it was named for Texas patriot James Charles Wilson.
La Vernia
La Vernia, TX
Established about 1846 or 1847 by Claiborne Rector, who built a stage stop and blacksmith shop here to serve travelers on the Chihuahua...
Site of Old Town of Union Valley
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(Settled in 1860s) Original schoolhouse of logs on site given by Harriet Smith Beaty in 1872 to trustees John Coleman, King Holstein, and...
Site of Old Town: Lodi
Floresville, TX
Community in an area known by 1720 as land of the Cayopines, a Coahuiltecan Indian tribe.
