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This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Burnet County, Texas. There are two districts and six individual properties listed on the National Register in the county. Two properties and one site within one district are designated as Recorded Texas Historic Landmarks.
North of Merilltown Road, FM 1325 is once again named Burnet Road and is a four-lane controlled roadway. It continues north for 2.1 miles (3.4 km) to its northern terminus at SH 45 in Round Rock . As of June 27, 1995, FM 1325 was officially designated Urban Road 1325 ( UR 1325 ), but on November 15, 2018, the road was redesignated back to FM 1325.
Midland to 51, accidentally designated as 137; rerouted to end in Ector County in 1935 and was cancelled four months later (as it was not built yet), but was submitted as a "lateral road project" for possible restoration; completely restored by September 1936 with an extension to Kermit proposed a month later; construction completed in 1937 ...
Veterans Memorial at Burnet County courthouse Rolling highway in Burnet County in Texas Hill Country toward Longhorn Cavern State Park. Burnet County (/ ˈ b ɜːr n ɪ t / BUR-nit) is a county located on the Edwards Plateau in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 49,130. [1] [2] Its county seat is Burnet. [3]
Burnet (/ ˈ b ɜːr n ɪ t / BUR-nit) is a city in and the county seat of Burnet County, Texas, United States. [4] Its population was 6,436 at the 2020 census. [5]Both the city and the county were named for David Gouverneur Burnet, the first (provisional) president of the Republic of Texas.
State Highway 5, North Texas Highway, from Texarkana to Paris, Sherman, Gainesville, Wichita Falls, Childress, Amarillo and Texline. Now US 82, US 287, SH 354, US 385, US 87; State Highway 6, King of Trails, from a point six miles north of Denison on the Red River through Denison and Dallas to Waco. Now US 75, US 80, US 77, US 81
SH 19 was one of the original 25 Texas state highways proposed on June 21, 1917, overlaid on top of the Paris-Houston Highway. [2] The original proposal was for it to run from the Texas/Oklahoma border north of Paris to Houston. On February 5, 1918, it was extended south to Freeport. [3]
The artist created in great detail in both pencil drawings and paintings. In addition to Gillespie County vistas, his Texas subjects were the German settlements of New Braunfels and Sisterdale , the Hamilton Pool and West Cave at Round Mountain , Marble Falls , and areas around Austin and San Antonio.