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In Jim Hogg City Park, Quitman, Texas [10] Historical (Subject) Marker, Texas Hist. Comm. Collins-Haines Home 1/2 mile Southeast of Quitman on Farm to Market Road 778 (Also Horton Street) [11] Recorded Texas Historic Landmark (RTHL) Concord Cemetery 6 mi. Southeast of Quitman at the intersection of farm to Market Road 778 at County Road 2590 [12]
Along Marshall, Quitman, Jefferson, Church, and College Sts, roughly from Cypress St. to North St. 32°59′47″N 94°58′00″W / 32.99634°N 94.9667°W / 32.99634; -94.9667 ( Pittsburg Commercial Historic
Jim Hogg's popularity extended beyond Texas, particularly in New York. The "Man in the Street" column in the edition of September 6, 1903, of The New York Times related the following anecdote regarding him: Ex-Gov. Hogg of Texas, who has a reputation for liking to play a practical joke every time he gets a chance, says he has been cured of the ...
There are four properties listed on the National Register in the county including one site that is both a State Antiquities Landmark and a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark. This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 29, 2024. [1]
The Pittsburg Commercial Historic District, in Pittsburg, Texas, is a 32 acres (13 ha) historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013. It included 66 contributing buildings and one contributing site , as well as 21 non-contributing buildings.
Fort Richardson State Historical Park Fort Richardson Hotel More images: 2011: 101 S. Main St. Jacksboro: 1967 US 281 and US 380, southwest corner of courthouse square Jacksboro's First Railroad Depot More images: 2700: S end of Depot St. at Ft. Richardson park boundary
Jim Hogg County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, the population was 4,838. [1] Its county seat is Hebbronville. [2] The county is named for James Stephen Hogg, the governor of Texas from 1891 to 1895.
Ima Hogg was born in Mineola, Texas, in 1882 to Jim Hogg and Sarah Ann "Sallie" Stinson. She was the second of four children, including brothers William Clifford Hogg (1875–1930), Michael Hogg (1885–1941), and Thomas Elisha Hogg (1887–1949). [11]