Details for Frazarville

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507018196

Data

Marker Number 18196
Atlas Number 5507018196
Marker Title Frazarville
Index Entry Frazarville
Address FM 102
City Egypt
County Wharton
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 760939
UTM Northing 3265344
Subject Codes communities
Marker Year 2015
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location from Egypt, 7.2 mi. NW on FM 102, near intersection with FM 3013
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text Near this site once stood the community of Frazarville, founded in 1857 by Dr. Isaac James Frazar and his father, Col. James Watson Frazar. A locust infestation and Comanche raids force them to move from Cibolo Creek in Bexar County to this site, just over the Wharton County line. Dr. Isaac James Frazar practiced medicine in Eagle Lake. His son, James Azariah Frazar, developed the community of Frazarville into several businesses that included a general store, cotton gin, and a blacksmith shop. James Watson Frazar’s other son, George Watson Frazar, remained in Bexar County as Sheriff and Texas Ranger. James Azariah Frazar also owned bank stock in Henrietta, Clay County. When the bank began to fail, in 1889, James moved his family to Henrietta to become president of the bank. He served successfully for five years, continuing his interests in Frazarville until 1892. His sister, Annie Gertrude Frazar, and her descendents continued to own portions of the Frazarville property. Several Family members are buried in the Frazar Family Cemetery near this site, including Isaac James Frazar, His wife, Almira Kimbro Frazar, and Annie Gertrude Frazar. The James Watson Frazar family was followed by brother Micajah Frazar and family to Matthews and Eagle Lake, where the Frazar Opera House was built. The Frazar ancestors originally arrived from Inverness, Scotland, to North Carolina in 1678. They owned plantations in North Carolina, Alabama (later Mississippi), Tennessee and Texas. Their migration across the South exemplified many other Scottish journeys to Texas made in the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. (2015)
ATLAS_NUM=5507018196

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