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San Antonio: Part of Fort Sam Houston 112: Presnall-Watson Homestead: Presnall-Watson Homestead: April 10, 2012 : Address restricted [6] San Antonio: Historic Farms and Ranches of Bexar County MPS 113: Prospect Hill Missionary Baptist Church: Prospect Hill Missionary Baptist Church: September 18, 1986 : 1601 Buena Vista
300 E. San Antonio Ave. El Paso: Commercial Structures of El Paso by Henry C. Trost Thematic Resources 4: Castner Range Archeological District: Castner Range Archeological District: April 22, 1976 : Address restricted [6] El Paso
The trail they followed to El Paso differed only slightly from Whiting and Smith's return route. This trail became known as the Lower or Military Road, and then the San Antonio–El Paso Road. "In 1850, the largest supply train to use the road" left Fort Inge for El Paso with 340 wagons, 4000 animals, 450 civilians, and 175 soldiers. [2]
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The highway continues on its original routing except for realignment in 1990 in El Paso, with the old route becoming US Business Route 54 and Texas Loop 478. Most of the current US 54 in El Paso is a limited-access highway known as the Patriot Freeway which, as of 2016, was only partially completed.
Old San Antonio Road historical marker in Cotulla in La Salle County in south Texas In 1915, the State of Texas and the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) funded a project to place pink granite markers at approximately 5-mile (8.0 km) intervals along the route of the Old San Antonio Road. V.N. Zively, a professional surveyor, mapped the ...
The carriage house predated the main house and all other structures on the property. Built in 1875, the frame and stone carriage house was restored in 1976–77. [8] The servants quarters was erected in 1877 and restored in 1983–84. [9] The one-story brick structure known as the river house once contained San Antonio's first natatorium. [10]
The Texas Triangle is a region of Texas that contains the state's five largest cities and is home to over half of the state's population. The Texas Triangle is formed by the state's four main urban centers, Austin, Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, and San Antonio, connected by Interstate 45, Interstate 10, and Interstate 35.