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Yegua Creek |
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Somerville,
TX,
USA
Latitude & Longitude:
30° 19' 31.497924",
-96° 30' 40.474656"
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Texas State Historical Marker |
In 1690 the Spanish gave the name San Francisco to this 62-mile Brazos River tributary; but on an 1822 map, Stephen F. Austin, Father of Texas, marked it Yegua, Spanish for mare. Mustang mares and foals then grazed among the Indians on the timbered creek. In 1826, colonist John P. Coles built a mill on the stream. A measure signed in 1837 by Texas President Sam Houston made the Yegua a county boundary. Floods often devastated the area until Lake Somerville harnessed Yegua's waters in 1967. Now a recreation area, the lake and creek benefit crops, wild life, and vacationers.
This page last updated: 7/15/2008 |
Yegua Creek Historical Marker Location Map, Somerville, Texas
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