Details for La Bahia Road

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5477008361

Data

Marker Number 8361
Atlas Number 5477008361
Marker Title La Bahia Road
Index Entry La Bahia Road
Address
City Brenham
County Washington
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 742630
UTM Northing 3352033
Subject Codes roads
Marker Year 1971
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location At the intersection of SH 36 and FM 390, 7 mi. N of Brenham.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text One of the first overland routes used by European explorers of Texas, La Bahia Road was originally an east-west Indian trail in southeastern Texas and Louisiana. Earlier it may have been an animal trail. Although not as famous, or long, as El Camino Real (the San Antonio Road), La Bahia is probably older and it figured quite importantly in the movement of explorers, soldiers, traders, and settlers across Texas. Possibly the first European to set foot on the road was La Salle, who explored for France in this area during 1685-87. Almost certainly it was traveled by the Spaniard Alonso De Leon, who searched for the French intruders in 1689. From 1812 on, the trail and its westernmost town, La Bahia (now Goliad), served agents of both war and peace. The Gutierrez-Magee Expedition, part of Mexico's revolt against Spain, used the road in 1812-13. In 1821 the first Anglo-American colonists in Texas, the vanguard of the "Old 300", came down La Bahia into this area. During the 1836 Texas Revolution, the road found use by troops of the Texan army; Col. James Fannin and his 400 men were massacred near the road--in Goliad. In the 20th century, La Bahia's route helped surveyors map modern Texas highways.
ATLAS_NUM=5477008361

Location Map