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A post office was established at Marysville in 1873 and remained in operation until the mid-1940s. It was named Marysville either after Mary (Fitch) Corn, an early settler who came to the area in 1867 with her husband Richard, or for her brother, R. A. Fitch, who came to this part of Cooke County in 1869, and lived in Marysville, California.
Marysville, Texas; Marysville, Washington; See also. Marysville station (disambiguation) Maryville (disambiguation) Maysville (disambiguation) Marystown (disambiguation)
Sam Houston, Texas revolutionary, politician and governor of Tennessee and Texas; lived in Maryville intermittently c. 1808—1813 [33] Lee Humphrey, college basketball player [34] Melanie Hutsell, television and movie actress [35] Roy Kramer, former commissioner of the Southeastern Conference [36] Annie Law (died 1889), conchologist [37]
Cooke County is a county in the U.S. state of Texas.At the 2020 census, its population was 41,668. [1] [2] The county seat is Gainesville. [3]The county was founded in 1848 and organized the next year.
Scotts' headquarters in Marysville. Scotts was founded in 1868 by Orlando M. Scott as a premium seed company for the U.S. agricultural industry. In the early 1900s, the company began a lawn grass seed business for homeowners, and in 1924, became the first company to ship grass seed products directly to stores.
Marysville is a city and the county seat of Yuba County, California, located in the Gold Country region of Northern California.As of the 2010 United States Census, the population was 12,072, reflecting a decrease of 196 from the 12,268 counted in the 2000 Census.
Maryville College was founded as the Southern and Western Theological Seminary in 1819 by Isaac L. Anderson, a Presbyterian minister.Anderson had founded a school, Union Academy, in nearby Knox County, before becoming minister at New Providence Presbyterian Church in Maryville.
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