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ROCK HOUSE,
TEXAS est. 1878
Census
statistics unavailable
Rock House School,
1910s – 1920s. The school was one of the larger rural schools in
the county in the early twentieth century. The Rock House
community was also known as “Draco,” the name for the village
that occupied the site before Anglo settlement.
(also
known as Hunt Crossing)
Courtesy of Ralph
D. Love
Click on thumbnail image for an enlarged view
Rock House Community - Historical
Marker
(0.8 mi. on 3405 just off 183) A pioneer
agricultural community of Williamson County, this site was first
settled in the late 1840s by Uriah H. Anderson, a native of
Tennessee who received a land grant here from the state of
Texas. By 1875 a rural school was in operation and classes were
held in the Bethel Church sanctuary. The settlement was named
for the stone structure, which was known as the Rock House.
Another church, Macedonia, which later became a Missionary
Baptist congregation, was organized in 1873. Early services and
camp meetings were conducted in a tabernacle. The settlement
also included a general store started about 1885 by T. C.
Sowell, The village was later the site of a grist mill, a
blacksmith shop, an active farmers' union, and a string band. A
post office was opened in 1890 under the name of Draco, an
Indian word for the area meaning "favorite place." It closed two
years later. The school continued until the 1940s when it was
consolidated with Liberty Hill (5 mi.SW). The general store,
later owned by other residents of the area, was in operation
until 1960. All that remains of the original townsite is the
Rock House Cemetery and the evidence of early buildings.
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front view
 satellite map

road map
GPS Points
Latitude: 30.704842, Latitude: -97.872152
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old stone house
view
Rock House / Anderson Cemetery
for
more info
click on
Rock House, Texas
by The Handbook of Texas Online
view other communities pages
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