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The Honorable Samuel Boyd FM 3351, Kendalia

Marker #5353 - 1996. Born in South Carolina in 1787, Samuel Boyd Patton moved to Tennessee as a youth. After serving in the war of 1812 he moved to Alabama where he held public office and served in the state legislature. In 183,7 Patton moved to Texas, was appointed to the Board of Land Commissioners and was a member of Congress of the Republic of Texas. He helped organize Blanco County and served as the first chief justice (county judge) from 1858-60. He was the second chief justice in Kendall County in 1865. He died in 1869 and is buried across the field nearby. (FM 3351, 2.8 miles west of Kendalia.)

One marker was placed at the gravesite of Samuel Boyd Patton. Another sign was placed to mark the road on FM 3351 in 1996.

Samuel Boyd Patton was born in 1787 in South Carolina. He died in 1869 and was buried in Kendall County on the land he pioneered, fought and settled. His grave site is on his old homestead beneath a huge, oak tree. Patton served in the War of 1812. He moved to Alabama where he held public office and served in the state legislature. He later (1865) served as County Judge in Kendall County.


Photo Credit: Sue Scruggs


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