Details for Albert Clinton Horton

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5481006475

Data

Marker Number 6475
Atlas Number 5481006475
Marker Title Albert Clinton Horton
Index Entry Horton, Albert Clinton
Address Park Dr.
City Wharton
County Wharton
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 783617
UTM Northing 3245498
Subject Codes governors; military topics; state official; Texas Revolution, Republic of Texas
Marker Year 1986
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Albert C. Horton Mini Park (in City Park, on Park Dr., N side 60 feet W of Circle Dr.)
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (1798-1865) Georgia native Albert Clinton Horton came to Texas in 1834 from Alabama, where he had served in the state legislature. He established a plantation along Caney Creek in present Wharton County. In 1835, he returned to Alabama to recruit volunteers for the Texas army, and he served as colonel of a cavalry unit during the Texas revolution. Upon the establishment of the Republic of Texas in 1836, Horton was elected to Congress. He was chairman of the commission appointed by President M. B. Lamar, which selected Austin as the site for a permanent capitol for the Republic of Texas in 1839. When Texas became a state in December 1845, Horton was elected its first lt. governor. He served as acting governor for a year while Governor Henderson was leading Texas forces in the Mexican war. When Baylor University was founded in 1845, Horton was a charter trustee. By the 1850s, he had homes in both Wharton and Matagorda. His home near this site, "Sycamore Grove," was razed in 1960. A community leader, he helped found Wharton's First Baptist Church. He and his wife, Elias Holliday, had six children, only two of whom lived to maturity. Horton died in 1865, and is buried in Matagorda Cemetery. Texas Sesquicentennial 1836 - 1986
ATLAS_NUM=5481006475

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