Judge
Greenleaf Fisk
(May 19, 1807 - Jan. 26, 1888)
Greenleaf Fisk remains the only man to
be the chief justice of three counties.

County's first judge helped establish government
a special thanks to the Community Impact Newspaper and
Karen R. Thompson for this slice of history
Judge Greenleaf Fisk
by The Handbook of Texas Online
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Judge Greenleaf Fisk
marker text
Born in Albany, New York, Greenleaf Fisk was the
son of a Presbyterian minister. He began preparation for the
ministry himself but left his studies to migrate to the Texas
frontier. In 1834 he settled in Bastrop. There he joined a
company of volunteers and fought at the Battle of San Jacinto,
April 21, 1836. Later he was elected to the Republic of Texas
Senate. In the 1840s Fisk moved his family to a log house on the
South San Gabriel River near present Leander. When Williamson
County was organized in 1848, Fisk was the first "chief
justice," as the office of county judge was then called, a
position he had held in Bastrop County. It is said that he often
waled the 11 or 12 miles from his home to the courthouse in
Georgetown. Fisk was also a surveyor, and many land records in
Williamson County bear his name. In 1860 Fisk moved to Brown
County, where he again served as county judge and held other
county offices. He donated 60 acres for the townsite of
Brownwood and additional acreage for county use. His grave is in
Brownwood's Greenleaf Cemetery. Fisk was married first to Mary
Manlove, who is buried near Leander. After her death, he married
Mary Hawkins. He had 15 children.
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