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Town of Bedias |
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Bedias,
TX,
USA
Latitude & Longitude:
30° 29' 5.64",
-96° 50' 33.82494"
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Texas State Historical Marker |
Named for North and South Bedias creeks, which in turn were named for the Bidai Indians, an agricultural people reputed to have been the oldest inhabitants of the area. Bidai means brushwood, which may refer to the building material used in their dwellings. The first white settlement in this vicinity was founded 1835 by Thomas P. Plaster, and for a while it was called Plasterville. In 1903, the community of Old Bedias surrendered most of its population to New Bedias after a branch of the International & Great Northern Railroad was built to the northeast. Townspeople from Pankey and Cotton also moved here. The name Bedias was retained, but only after a heated struggle in which determined citizens refused to have the town named for a railroad official. A famous, early resident of the Bedias area was Sarah Dodson, who in 1835 made the first Lone Star flag in Texas. She lived here from 1844 to 1848 and is buried in Old Bethel Cemetery, seven miles west. One of the most unique features of this region is the large number of Tektites (also called Bediasites) found here. These are beautiful, glassy, meteor-like stones which fell to earth 34 million years ago. Amazingly, Indians called them jewels of the moon.
This page last updated: 7/15/2008 |
Town of Bedias Historical Marker Location Map, Texas
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