Historical Marker

Muldoon Community

Historical marker location:
Corner of FM 2237 & FM 154, Muldoon, Texas
( Muldoon Community Park)
Marker installed: 2014

Located in southwest Fayette County, the Muldoon area was first settled in the

1830s. The community was named in honor of Father Miguel Muldoon and is

situated on land acquired in 1831 through a Spanish land grant from Stephen F.

Austin. Father Muldoon was of Irish heritage, educated in Spain and moved to

Mexico in 1821 when he entered the priesthood. In Mexico, he met Stephen F.

Austin, who gave eleven leagues of land to Muldoon in return for his ministry

to the colonists. Four of these leagues were located in Fayette County.

The San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railroad was built through the area in 1887

and the town grew quickly around it. James Kerr established the first post

office in January 1888. Within a decade, Muldoon boasted its own physician,

general merchandise stores, churches, a barber shop, saloon, meat market,

blacksmith shop, hotel, woodworking shop, lumberyard, cotton gin, railroad

depot and a school. The Muldoon courthouse building is a rarity. Constructed in

1890, it is one of six justice precinct courthouses that were built in Fayette

County. Over the years, it has been used as a mattress factory, canning

kitchen, site for quilting bees, voting location, community meeting place and a

museum. Muldoon is also known for its Muldoon blue sandstone. Taken from the

A. B. Kerr quarry, the sandstone was used in the construction of several sites

in Texas, including courthouses, a jail, churches and later in the construction

of Galveston and other coastal jetties. Muldoon was once a thriving community,

but declined as the railroad industry became less relevant. (2014).