Victoria County, Texas
Alden, C. R., Building
Alonso, Frank, House
B'nai Israel
Barden-O'Connor House
Barnes, W. C., House
Bendt, E. H. D., House
Bettin, Max, House
Braman House
Buhler, Theodore, House
Building at 205 East Constitution
Burrough-Daniel House
Calhoun Bakery
Callender House
City of Victoria Pumping Plant-Waterworks
Clark House
Clark, Robert, House
Clegg, John H., House
Crain, F. H., House
DeLeon Plaza and Bandstand
Diebel-Hyak House
Farmers and Merchants Cotton Gin Warehouse
Fleming-Welder House
Fossati's
Fossati, E. J., House
Fox, Jacob, House
Gaylord-Levy House
Gervais House
Goldman's Cotton Gin Warehouse
Goldman, A., Building
Gramann House
Hauschild, George and Adele, House
Hauschild, George H., Building
Hill-Howard House
Hiller House
Hiller House
House at 1602 North Moody
House at 1907 Southwest Ben Jordan
House at 304 West Stayton
House at 306 East Forrest
House at 401 East Stayton
House at 402 W. Colorado
House at 407 East Convent
House at 4402 East Juan Linn
House at 604 East Santa Rosa
House at 702 Siegfried
House at 706 Siegfried
House at 804 Siegfried
Hull House
Jecker, E. J., House
Jecker, J. T., House
Jordan-Koch House
Kaufman, E. C., House
Keef-Filley Building
Lander-Hopkins House
Lane-Tarkington House
Lawrence House
Leffland, Jules, House
Levi-Welder House
Little House
Martin-Fiek-Thumford, Vera, House
McCabe Building
McCan-Nave House
McDonald House
McFaddin, James, House
McNamara-O'Conner House
Mitchell, Guy, House
Moeller House
Mohris-Abschier House
Murphy, Mrs. J. V., House
Nave, Royston, Memorial
O'Connor, Thomas M., House
O'Connor-Proctor Building
Old Brownson School
Old Federal Building and Post Office
Old Municipal Assembly Hall
Old Nazareth Academy
Old Victoria County Courthouse
Our Lady of Lourdes Church
Pela House
Phillips, Judge Alexander H., House
Pickering House
Pippert House
Presbyterian Iglesia Nicea
Proctor House
Proctor-Vandenberge House
Randall Building
Regan, D. H., House
Roselle-Smith House
Saint Mary's Catholic Church
Schroeder House
Schummacker Company Building
Sengele, Alphonse T., House
Shrader, Henry, House
Sigmund House
South Bridge Street Historic District
Stuart House
Tasin House
Texas Company Filling Station
Townsend-Wilkins House
Trinity Lutheran Church
Urban, Fred, House
Vandenberge, J. V., House
Victoria Colored School
Victoria County Monument
Victoria Grist Windmill
Weber-Schuchert House
Webster Chapel United Methodist Church
Welder, Robert H., House
Wheeler, William, House
Williams, B. F., House
Woodhouse House
Zahn, Herman and Alvina, House
1892 Victoria County Courthouse
201st Fighter Squadron, Mexican Expeditionary Air Force (The Aztec Eagles)
A. Goldman Home
Abel Seymour Cunningham
Abraham Levi House
Agapito De Leon
Alexander Lowe House
B. F. Williams House
Band Stand
Beck Ranch Headquarters
Billy Kyle Ranch House
Brownson's Bank
C. T. Beck Ranch
Callender Home
Camp Henry E. McCulloch
Camp Henry E. McCullough
Camp Victoria
Captain James P. January
Carlos de la Garza
Coletoville Cemetery
Confederate Memorial
Crescent Valley Cemetery
Darwin M. Stapp
De Leon Plaza
Don Martin De Leon
Dona Patricia De La Garza De Leon (1775-1849)
Early Victoria Home
Edward Conrad
El Camino Real in Victoria County
Evergreen Cemetery of Victoria
F.W. Gross High School
Felix De Leon
Fernando De Leon
First Baptist Church of Victoria
First English Evangelical Lutheran Church
First Presbyterian Church of Victoria
First United Methodist Church of Victoria
Fleming-Welder House
Fort St. Louis
Fossati's Delicatessen
Foster Army Air Field
Friedrech and Margaretha Hiller House
Garza, Carlos de la
George H. Hauschild Building
Gilbert Onderdonk and Nursery, Texas
Goldman Ginnery
Guadalupe River
Hauschild Opera House
Henderson House
Hill-O'Connor-Howard House
Home of Empresario Martin De Leon
Infant Jesus of Prague Catholic Church
J. Meredith Tatton House
Jacob Fox House
James A. McFaddin Home
Joe F. and Amelia Jecker House
John Howland Wood
John J. Linn
John Joseph Linn Home
John Van Bibber
Judge Alexander Phillips Home
McFaddin Mercantile
McFaddin Post Office
McNamara House
Memorial Square
Memorial Square Cemetery
Mission Espiritu Santo Cattle Ranch
Mission Nuestra S. Del E. Santo De Zuniga
Mitchell School
Mount Salem American Baptist Church
Mundt Place
Murphy Home
Murphy Ranch
Noll School and Cemetery
Nursery Cemetery
O'Connor-Proctor Building
Old Federal Building
Old Grist Mill
Old L.D. Heaton Home
Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church
Palestine Missionary Baptist Church
Pela House
Peter Underhay Pridham
Phillips-Sale House
Pioneer Marker
Power Home
Proctor House
Regan House
Robert H. and Pauline Clark House
Robert L. Dabney House
Robert S. Weisiger
Saint Joseph Catholic Cemetery
Saint Joseph Catholic Church
Salem
Sengele Home
Shillerville Cemetery
Sidney Roper Weisiger
Silvestre De Leon
Site of Mission Nuestra Senora del Espiritu Santo de Zuniga
Site of Round Top House
Site of Southern Pacific Railroad Depot
Site of Victoria's First Church
St. Mary's Catholic Church
Temple B'nai Israel
The Victoria Advocate
The Woodhouse Home
Thurmond Building
Tonkawa Bank (Vista of Mission Espiritu Santo)
Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church
Victor M. Rose
Victor Marion Rose
Victoria
Victoria Advocate
Victoria County
Victoria County
Victoria County Honor Roll
Victoria County Monument
Victoria County, C.S.A.
Victoria Pumping Station
Viola Case
Webster Chapel United Methodist Church
William Pinckney McLean
William Robert Smith
Albrecht Cemetery
Bischoff
Bischoff
B’nai Israel Cemetery
Canaan Hill Cemetery
Catholic Cemetery #1
Catholic Cemetery #2
Catholic Cemetery #3
City Cemetery
Coletoville Cemetery
Community Cemetery
Crescent Valley Cemetery
De La Garza Cemetery
De Leon Cemetery
Emison Family #2
Emison Family Cemetery #1
Evergreen Cemetery
Fagan Cemetery
Farrer Cemetery
Fitzpatrick Cemetery
Fordtran Cemetery
Gazeta Graves
Girdy Cemetery
Guadalupe Cemetery
Hill Cemetery
Hirschhauser Cemetery
Inez Cemetery
Jewett-Booker Cemetery
John Reeves Cemetery
Joshua Cemetery #1
Joshua Cemetery #2
King Cemetery
Kobitz-Kobetz Cemetery
Linn Addition Cemetery
McDonald Cemetery
McFaddin Catholic Cemetery
Memorial Park Cemetery
Memory Gardens
Mission Valley Cemetery #1
Mission Valley Lutheran Cemetery
Murphy Cemetery
Nolen Family Cemetery
Noll School and Cemetery
Nursery Cemetery
Oliver Cemetery
Pleasant Green Cemetery
Preston Robinson Rose Grave
Reeves Cemetery
Reinecke Cemetery
Resurrection Cemetery
Rydolph Cemetery
Saint Joseph Cemetery
Sample Cemetery
San Jose Cemetery
Seiler Cemetery
Seviers Cemetery
Shillerville Cemetery
Six Mile Cemetery
Spring Creek Cemetery
Steiner-Schob Cemetery
Stiger Cemetery
Terrell Cemetery
Unknown #1 (Duplicate)
Unknown #2 (NE of Reinecke Rd)
Unknown #3 (unknown location, West Field))
Unknown #4 (unknown location)
Unknown (S of Victoria on Robles St. near Hand Rd and Pleasant Green Dr.)
Unknown Graves
Winn-Traylor Cemetery
Wood High Cemetery
Woodlawn Cemetery
In the early 19th century, Anglo-American settlers began to move into the area, attracted by the fertile land for agriculture and the potential for ample grazing. The Mexican government encouraged colonization, and by 1834, there were around 100 families living in the region. However, tensions between the settlers and the Mexican government eventually led to the Texas Revolution in 1835.
During the Texas Revolution, Victoria became a strategic point for both the Texian and Mexican armies. The Battle of Guadalupe River occurred here in 1835, where the Texian rebels under the command of George Collingsworth captured the Mexican garrison without bloodshed. The town of Victoria formally became the capital of the Republic of Texas in 1839 before it was moved to Houston and later Austin.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Victoria County experienced significant growth and development. The railroad arrived in the late 1800s, leading to increased trade and the expansion of the local economy. The discovery of oil in the early 20th century further contributed to the county's prosperity. Today, Victoria County is a thriving hub for agriculture, oil and gas production, and serves as a regional center for healthcare, education, and businesses.
Brief timeline of the history of Victoria County, Texas:
- 1824 - Victoria County is established as a Municipality of Mexico
- 1836 - Texas gains independence from Mexico
- 1837 - Victoria County is created as an original county of the Republic of Texas
- 1852 - The town of Victoria becomes the county seat
- 1860 - Population of Victoria County reaches 2,305
- 1874 - The Texas Mexican Railway expands into Victoria County, stimulating economic growth
- 1899 - Oil is discovered in the county, leading to a boom in the petroleum industry
- 1924 - The DuPont Company establishes a plant in Victoria County, contributing to industrial development
- 1930 - Population of Victoria County exceeds 30,000
- 1952 - The O'Connor-Proctor Building, the first air-conditioned building in town, is constructed
- 1960 - Victoria County Courthouse is added to the National Register of Historic Places
- 2008 - Hurricane Ike causes extensive damage to Victoria County
- 2019 - Victoria County celebrates its 182nd anniversary
This timeline provides a concise overview of the key events in the history of Victoria County, Texas.