Historical Markers in Hood County, Texas
Acton Baptist Church (First Baptist Church of Acton)
Acton Cemetery
Acton Methodist Church
Acton Public Square
Add-Ran Christian College
Antioch Cemetery
Antioch Community
Aston House
Aston-Landers Building
Baker-Carmichael House
Baker-Doyle Building
Baker-Rylee Building and Town Square Service Station
Bowden Kennon House
Bush-Morgan Cherry Building
City named for Confederate General General H.B. Granbury (1831-1864) and Granbury's Texas Brigade
Comanche Peak
County Named for Famous Confederate General John Bell Hood
Cresson School
Crockett's Bounty
Daniel House
Daniel-Harris Home
David L. Nutt Home
Dr. William and Eunice Walker House
E. A. Hannaford Building
E. A. Hannaford House
Elizabeth Crockett
Elm Flat Cemetery
First Baptist Church of Granbury
First Christian Church of Granbury
First National Bank
First Presbyterian Church of Granbury
Former Acton Masonic Lodge Hall
Friendship Cemetery
Glenn Brothers Building
Glenn Cemetery
Gordon Home
Granbury Cemetery
Granbury House
Granbury Light Plant
Granbury Methodist Church
Granbury Opera House
Granbury Railroad Depot
Grave of Elizabeth Crockett
Hardware and Tin Shop
Harris Building
Haynes-Burns-Ewell Building
Holderness-Aiken House
Hood County Courthouse
Hood County Jailhouse
Hood County News
J.D. and Georgia Brown House
J.F. and J. Nutt Building
James Hogan Doyle and Mary Kate Stringfellow Doyle
John W. Bull Stone House
Lees-Bryan House
Long Creek Cemetery
Martin Cemetery
Mitchell Bend Cemetery
Nellie Gray Robertson
Nubbin Ridge Cemetery
Panter Branch School
Pleasant Thorp
Rock Church Cemetery
Site of Schultz Blacksmith Shop
Site of the Home of Elizabeth Crockett
Smith-Savage House
Stockton Bend
Stroud Creek Cemetery
Temple Hall United Methodist Church
The Colony Cemetery
The Fair
Thorp Spring Cemetery
Thrash-Landers-Hiner House
Three Miles South to the Grave of Elizabeth Crockett
Tolar Tabernacle
W. D. and Essie Gafford House
W.M. Miller Cemetery
Wright-Henderson-Duncan House