[Telegram From B. D. Dashiell to Mrs. W. J. Bryan, August, 21, 1912] (open access)

[Telegram From B. D. Dashiell to Mrs. W. J. Bryan, August, 21, 1912]

Telegram From B. D. Dashiell to Mrs. W. J. Bryan offering assistance after Mr. Bryan's accident
Date: August 21, 1912
Creator: Bryan, Banard Dashiell
Object Type: Letter
System: The Portal to Texas History
[Telegram from L. T. Dashiell to Mrs. W. J. Bryan, August 19, 1912] (open access)

[Telegram from L. T. Dashiell to Mrs. W. J. Bryan, August 19, 1912]

Telegram from L. T. Dashiell to Mrs. W. J. Bryan asking to remain updated on Mr. Bryan's accident.
Date: August 19, 1912
Creator: Dashiell, L. T.
Object Type: Letter
System: The Portal to Texas History

Leon County

Blue line print of survey map of Leon County, Texas, showing rivers, creeks, original land grant or surveys, cities, towns, and railroads. Handwritten legend with hand drawn red lines to impose San Antonio-Nacodoches Road in 1853 onto published map. Scale [ca. 1:213,333] (4000 varas to 5/8 of an inch).
Date: 1916
Creator: Atlee, Tom
Object Type: Map
System: The Portal to Texas History

Leon County.

Survey map of Leon County, Texas, showing property lines, ownership, land grants, and plat numbers. The map also includes rivers, creeks, cities, towns, and railroads. No scale information given.
Date: 1853
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Map
System: The Portal to Texas History

General Highway Map Leon County, Texas

Highway map of Leon County, Texas, showing rivers, lakes, creeks, streams, cities, towns, outlying buildings (including schools, churches, and post offices), roads, highways (giving mileage between points), bridges, railroads, cemeteries, oil and gas fields, oil or gas wells, utility lines, petroleum pipelines, mines or quarries, and airfields. Map includes a key to counties diagram and an extensive legend indicating geographical and human-made features. Scale [ca. 1:126,720] (2 miles to the inch).
Date: 1972
Creator: Texas. Highway Department. Planning Survey Division.
Object Type: Map
System: The Portal to Texas History