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SEGUIN, TEXAS

Guadalupe County Seat, Central Texas South

29°34'28"N 97°57'55"W (29.574329, -97.965332)

Hwy 90 and I-10
Hwy 123 & 46
50 miles S of Austin
21 miles S of San Marcos
13 miles SE of New Braunfels
35 miles E of San Antonio
ZIP codes 78155-78156
Area code 830
Population: 29,433 (2020)
25,175 (2010) 22,011(2000) 18,692 (1990)

Book Hotel Here › Seguin Hotels

Seguin TX - Juan Seguin  Equestrian Statue
Statue of Juan Seguin
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, February 2011

Seguin's Namesake:

  • Juan Seguin: A foreigner in his native land by Clay Coppedge
    How many Texians could say they were at the Alamo and the Battle of San Jacinto? Juan Seguin could. Or how many Texian veterans of those battles would soon after the war be branded a traitor?

  • An Equestrian Statue of Juan Seguin


  • Seguin, Texas
    Landmarks / Attractions


    Seguin has an outstanding assortment of 19th century and early 20th century buildings. It also has a devoted group of preservationists, local historians, an active garden club and librarians who take care of business. It's also a Main Street City and is home to a couple of writers, one of whom happens to be a town barber.

    We have to wonder if Janice Woods-Windle (author of True Women) co-authored a book with Charley Eckhardt (Tales of Badmen, Bad Women and Bad Places) that their book would be called Truly Bad Women.

    Guadalupe County courthouse Justice, Seguin Texas
    Photo courtesy Terry Jeanson, January, 2008
    Guadalupe County Courthouse

  • Guadalupe County Courthouse
    J. Riely Gordon is primarily known for his Texas courthouse designs, however his other buildings include the Arizona State Capitol building, several county jail buildings and at least this one bank. His Texas courthouse portfolio includes Ellis, Comal, Lee, Gonzales, Wise, Bexar and Victoria Counties.

  • Max Starcke Park / Guadalupe River

  • An Equestrian Statue of Juan Seguin

  • Sebastopol House

  • The Ranger Oaks - Historic Trees in Seguin

  • "The World's Largest Pecan"

    Book Hotel Here › Seguin Hotels

  • Seguin TX - Sebastopol House
    November 2013 photo by Billy Hathorn, Wikimedia Commons
    Sebastopol House by Mike Cox

    Seguin TX Miller Bridge
    The Miller Bridge in Max Starcke Park
    later renamed the F.C. Weinert Bridge (1939).
    Postcard courtesy The William Beauchamp Collection.
    More Texas Bridges

    Seguin TX - Texas Theatre with Neon Sign
    Texas Theatre, c1929
    Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, May 2013

    Seguin TX - Palace Theatre Neon Sign

    The Palace Theatre
    Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, February 2011
    More Texas Theatres



    The 1898 Nolte Bank Building designed by J. Riely Gordon
    TE Photo October 2000


    Plaza Hotel in Seguin Texas
    Plaza Hotel and the hanging tree
    c1935

    Old postcard TE Archives


    Seguine, Texas - Riverside Cemetery  old graves
    Riverside Cemetery
    Photo courtesy Ken Rudine, October 2009


    Texas -  Post Oak Community Cemetery
    Photo courtesy William Beauchamp, June 2011
    Post Oak Community Cemetery


    Tidbits from Seguin's Interesting History

    Railroad depot
    The Southern Pacific Railroad Depot
    Razed in 1987
    TE Postcard archives
    More Texas Depots

  • The Southern Pacific Railroad Depot c. 1910
    Razed in 1987
    The beautiful Seguin Railroad Station was demolished in the late 1980s when the railroad determined that vacant stations along their line were liabilities. No consideration was given to relocation, although the city would've gladly cooperated.



  • Seguin TX - Mule-drawn Street RR 1907

    Seguin Street Railway, Psmk 1907
    Photo courtesy Dan Whatley Collection


  • Seguin's mule-driven line

    When the railroad was the primary economic force in Seguin, a rail line one mile long was extended to downtown to convey people and parcels downtown. This mule-driven line was Seguin's only public transportation system. In addition, the hotels that were in operation at that time had their private hacks which were forerunners to our so-called "courtesy cars" of today.

  • Seguin TX - mule-drawn streetcar

    Photo courtesy TXDoT


    Seguin TX - mule-drawn street railway

    Seguin Street railway Co.
    Seguin's mule-drawn streetcar

    Photo courtesy Dan Whatley Collection




  • Texas Beef: It's what was for dinner in California
    In 1854, a Seguinite named Michael Erskine made trail driving history when he drove 1000 head of cattle from Guadalupe County to California. That's right, California. No explanation was given for this destination, but we're sure the cattle were put to good use. A few years later, one Andrew Erskine was killed at Antietam, but we don't know if it was a son or brother of Michael.

  • Death in the Garden - Manhunt to the Red River
    The Seguin Garden Club is one of the few in the State of Texas to have a Texas Brands Inspector buried on their grounds. By brands, of course we mean cattle brands. There was a bit of brand changing going on in the area in 1877. The Inspector - a man named Henry Holmes Batey made a request to inspect a rancher's cattle as they were about to be driven across the Guadalupe River. The man refused and while Henry later napped with his eyes shaded by his hat, he was shot in the head.

    His brother trailed the cowardly assassin all the way to the Red River. After he returned he would only say that he saw the man ride into the river heading toward Indian Territory. He was silent when asked if the man made it to the other side.

    Book Hotels › Seguin Hotels

  • Seguin Chronicles

    Seguin's Resident Ghost

  • The Ghost on Milam Street by C. F. Eckhardt

  • In Search of Seguin's Headless Ghost by Ken Rudine



  • Seguin Stories

  • Two Pilots, Three Air Forces, One Hometown
    Lt. Col. Alvin Mueller & Lieutenant Dick Campbell

  • "Sam Houston slept here" by Mike Cox

  • The Aumont Hotel

  • The Plaza Hotel

  • Hotel Wars in Seguin
    Two hotels in one town, the rivalry of building them and the little girl who loved them both. No, it's not a Shirley Temple movie script.

  • "Eloise" in Texas
    When you outgrow one lobby, move to another hotel

  • Little Mysteries by Mike Cox
    Guadalupe County farmer Bernard Pankau found a small mystery on his farm near Seguin in 1938.

  • Charley Eckhardt's Badmen, Bad Women and Bad Places - A book review

  • Guadalupe City

  • Skat by Michael Barr

    Skat was once a popular card game in the German Hill Country, but good luck if you are looking for someone who knows how to play it...

    The game of skat (pronounced 'scot') originated in Altenberg, Germany in the early 19th century when members of the local card players' club combined elements of a popular Italian game called Tarock with another game called Schafkopf (sheep's head)... There are still skat tournaments in Seguin and New Braunfels, but not so much in Fredericksburg anymore.... more


  • Seguin Tours

  • Historic sites and homes - The Seguin Chamber of Commerce has a map of historic sites and homes and another on sites featured in the book True Women. Contact the chamber (1-830-379-6382) for a complete list of the nearby attractions to Seguin.

  • The Seguin Driving Tour as well as the

  • True Women Tour were put together by Wilton Woods, brother of the author of True Women. Mr. Woods has done extensive research on Seguin's architecture and visits his hometown several times a year from his home in New York.

    Seguin Tourist and Local Information
    Seguin Chamber of Commerce: 427 N. Austin Street
    1-830-379-6382 Website: http://seguintx.org.

    Book Hotel Here › Seguin Hotels


  • Seguin, Texas Forum

  • Subject: Woman Hollering Creek

    At one time, back in the early '80s, the Highway Department sign at Woman Hollering Creek actually did read Woman Hollow Creek. It stayed that for about a year until somebody got through to the folks who put up the signs & told them what the name of the creek actually was. This was when there was an effort to identify the names of all the rivers, creeks, & draws in the state & put road signs with the names on them. There are a lot of 'Five Mile Creek,' 'Fifteen Mile Creek,' & similar signs, because some of the creeks didn't have actual names. They were called "that creek you cross five miles out of town on the County Seat road."

    Along State 16 below San Antonio there's Macho Creek. This has nothing to do with the modern usage of the word 'macho.' 'Macho' is the Spanish word for a gelded mule.

    There's a creek in Seguin, tributary to the Guadalupe, that apparently has never had a name. At any rate, when the state tried to find out the name of the creek so a sign could be put up, no one--not even the oldest folks in town--could remember the creek ever having a name. - C. F. Eckhardt, September 06, 2006


    Texas Escapes November 2000 Feature Town



  • Take a road trip

    Central Texas South

    Seguin, Texas Area Cities & Towns:
    Austin | San Marcos | New Braunfels | San Antonio

    See Guadalupe County

    Book Hotel Here:
    Seguin Hotels | More Hotels

    Texas Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories, landmarks and recent or vintage photos, please contact us.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


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