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San Pedro Springs Park is located in the Bexar County city of San Antonio in the U.S. state of Texas. Surrounding the source of the springs, the 46-acre park is the oldest in the state of Texas. It is the location of a Payaya Indian village known as Yanaguana, [2] and is the original site of the city of San Antonio. [2]
San Antonio: Recorded Texas Historic Landmark; part of San Antonio Downtown and River Walk Historic District 122: Salado Battlefield and Archeological Site: Salado Battlefield and Archeological Site: November 21, 1978 : Address restricted [6] San Antonio: 123: San Antonio Casino Club Building: San Antonio Casino Club Building
This was the first permanent European settlement in San Antonio. San Pedro Park swimming pool or lake, in 2011. San Pedro Springs Park and Lake, San Antonio, Texas (postcard, circa 1907) In the 1730s, an acequia was built to carry water from the springs toward the city for irrigation and household use.
San Antonio on Parade: Six Historic Festivals. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-1-58544-222-5. Bremer, Thomas S. (2004). Blessed with Tourists: The Borderlands of Religion and Tourism in San Antonio. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-5580-5. Chambers, William T. (1940). "San Antonio, Texas". Economic Geography.
By the year 1706, the Spanish had converted some Payaya among the Indigenous converts baptized at Mission San Francisco Solano, 5 miles (8.0 km) from the Rio Grande in Coahuila, Mexico. Today's municipality of Guerrero is the approximate location of Mission San Francisco Solano. [5] [6] The Payaya were a small band of sixty families by 1709. [7]
Home of: San Antonio Missions - Texas League (1932–1942, 1946) Location: northwest corner of San Pedro Avenue and West Myrtle Street, across from San Antonio College, according to Google Maps [5] Currently: athletic field. Same site as San Pedro Park. Mission Stadium Home of: San Antonio Missions/Bullets - Texas League (1947–1964)
A snowplow clears snow from a road, as a winter storm hits the Midwest, in Kansas City, Missouri, U.S., January 5, 2025, in this still image obtained from video.
The Spanish Governor's Palace is a historic adobe from the Spanish Texas period located in Downtown San Antonio.. It is the last visible trace of the 18th-century colonial Presidio San Antonio de Béxar complex, and the only remaining example in Texas of an aristocratic 18th-century Spanish Colonial in−town residence. [4]