Inscription
Constructed in 1869 of virgin pine and oak by James A. Stinson, a widower who came to Texas in 1868 from Georgia after having served as a colonel in the Confederate Army. He brought with him his daughter Sallie. He bought extensive timber and farm lands in the eastern area of Wood County; operated a large sawmill which sent lumber throughout the state.
Was also known as an early-day scientific farmer. Mrs. Nathan Jones, a widow with one daughter, Mary, became the second wife of Col. Stinson. The had two daughters, Lily and Cliffie, and one son, James F. In the parlor of the house, on April 22, 1874, Sallie Stinson married James Stephen Hogg, who later became the first native-born governor of the state.
Col. Stinson was a southern aristocrat, a progressive thinker and a great scholar of government. He probably had great influence on James S. Hogg's ideas on good government. Was a leader in the county and state Grange, an organization which strove to protect rural interests. He was also instrumental in getting enacted into law the bill creating experimental farm, Texas Agricultural and Mechanical College.
Stinson's home was always open to young and old. (1968)
Location
Sources
More markers in Wood
Carlock Home
Winnsboro, TX
1903 - Colonial mansion built by Marcus DeWitt Carlock, Sr., prominent early-day attorney, Confederate courier, political leader, friend...
Collins-Haines Home
Quitman, TX
1860 - First brick structure in Wood County.
Flora Lodge No. 119, A.F. & A.M.
Quitman, TX
Founded before the Civil War, as Quitman Masonic Lodge.
James Stephen Hogg
Quitman, TX
(March 24, 1851-March 3, 1906) Texas statesman whose nationally-acclaimed public career began at this site.
Lankford-Stinson House
Winnsboro, TX
Probably built in the early 1890s for merchant and civic leader J. M. Lankford, this home was originally a one-and-one-half-story structure.
