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Fayette County, Texas – Racial and ethnic composition Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category.
The following 67 pages use this file: Ammannsville, Texas; Bethlehem Lutheran Church (Round Top, Texas) Black Jack Springs, Texas; Bluff, Texas; Carmine, Texas
Precinct courthouses were quite rare in early Texas and this one was listed as an Recorded Texas Historic Landmark in 1997; on July 10, 2008 it was designated a contributing property to the Fayetteville Historic District. [2]
Santa Fe County, Texas formed in 1848 from lands claimed by the Republic of Texas and ceded by Mexico. It included a vast area later becoming portions of several states from New Mexico east of the Rio Grande extending northward into south-central Wyoming. Within Texas' modern boundaries, the county included the Trans-Pecos and most of the ...
Registered Texas Historic Landmark Image Marker number Physical address Nearest city Year designated Description 1919 Freestone County Courthouse 23879: 118 E. Commerce St. Fairfield: 2023 Bradley House 9861: 318 Moody St.
Unincorporated communities in Fayette County, Texas (32 P) Pages in category "Populated places in Fayette County, Texas" This category contains only the following page.
A former precinct courthouse, sits in the town square with extra wide 100-foot (30 m) curbed streets on its borders as specified in the original 1850 plat. Bounded by Main, Washington, Live Oak and Fayette streets the town square is the focus of commercial development.
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