Texas Historical Markers on the campus of SFA

Texas Historical Marker #9246 is located in front of the Austin Building, at the end of Vista Drive. Founders' Square between the Austin Building (1924) and the Rusk Building (1926) is nearby.

Other markers in this area include a marker to the University Tradition in Nacogdoches, markers to two early presidents, Alton Birdwell (1870-1954), and Paul Boynton (1898-1958), and markers to Stephen Fuller Austin, the Austin Building, Thomas J. Rusk, and the Rusk Building.

Marker Index

 

 

 

 

 

Stephen Fuller Austin

(November 3, 1793 - December 37, 1836)

Republics often point to one person whose vision and leadership led to their creation. For the Republic of Texas (1836- 1845) that person is Stephen Fuller Austin. Stephen Fuller Austin

Austin, the son of Moses and Maria Brown Austin, was born on the Virginia frontier. He attended schools in Kentucky
and Connecticut before opting to work in his father's mercantile business in Missouri. He served as a judge in Arkansas prior to moving to New Orleans where he worked at a newspaper and studied law.

In 1821 Moses Austin was granted permission by Spain to settle 300 families in Texas. His untimely death while in
Louisiana recruiting settlers left the completion of his ambitious project to his son Stephen.

Although a series of Mexican leaders subsequently rejected his father's original grant, Austin persevered and successfully lobbied for the grant's continuance. He astutely governed every facet of the original 300 families' settlement in southeast Texas (1821-1825) and those of another 900 families in the area by 1832.

Austin was imprisoned in Mexico after requesting separate statehood for Texas in 1833. He returned to Texas in 1835 and helped it gain independence from Mexico. Austin, chosen as the new Republic's first secretary of state, is known as the father of Texas.

Stephen F. Austin Bicentennial 1793 - 1993


Links:

SFA or TJR?

1936 SFA Map

Texas Archives: SFA

 

 



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Contact: Dr. Jere L. Jackson
E-mail: jjackson@sfasu.edu
©Jere L. Jackson, SFASU