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In 2005 Travis County was the only county in Texas to vote against the Proposition 2 state constitutional amendment banning gay marriage, with slightly under 60% of voters being against it. [28] In 2020, Travis County backed Democrat Joe Biden with nearly 72% of the vote, his strongest showing in the state and the best showing for any ...
Location of Travis County in Texas. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Travis County, Texas. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Travis County, Texas, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts ...
The Heman Marion Sweatt Travis County Courthouse is the county courthouse for Travis County, Texas. Located in downtown Austin, Texas (the county seat ), the courthouse holds civil and criminal trial courts and other functions of county government.
Third degree felony charges were filed against Don Wasek's son, Mitchell Wasek, on Feb. 28, according to online court records in Travis County, Texas. The charges stem from an incident on Sept. 26 ...
The median market value for single-family homes is down 7% in Travis County, to $551,419. The median taxable value for homes is up 6%, to $401,806.
Moore's Crossing Historic District is a community located in rural Travis County nine miles southeast of Austin, Texas near the Austin–Bergstrom International Airport.. The location was used as a low-water crossing of Onion Creek as early as the 1840s but did not receive its current name until the early 1900s, when John B. Moore built a store in the area.
The Original Townsite of Montopolis Historical Marker. Texas Historical Commission, marker number 22517, marker year 2019. [1] Marker is located in Govalle Neighborhood Park, 5200 Bolm Rd, Austin, TX. Travis County has had two locations named Montopolis. The first was during the Republic of Texas period north of the Colorado River.
Richard Moya (August 14, 1932 - February 16, 2017) was the first Mexican-American elected to public office in Travis County, Texas, becoming County Commissioner in 1970, having been elected in 1969. Characterized as a "legendary Chicano activist" and a "political trailblazer" by Austin newspapers, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] he led the way for Latinos to ...