Historical Information
From the official tourism site of Baytown, Texas
Baytown
Historical Information
Baytown History
Bay Area Historical Society
Baytown Historical Museum
Republic of Texas Plaza
Bicentennial Park
Wallisville Heritage Park and Museum
San Jacinto Monument and Battleship Texas
Historical Markers
 
 
   Homesite (Point Pleasant) of William Scott
 

Marker Name


Homesite (Point Pleasant) of William Scott

Marker Location


500 Bayway Dr.

Baytown, TX

Date Erected


1990

Designations


Designations

Marker Text


A native of Virginia, William Scott (1784-1837) was a planter, merchant, and stockraiser in his native state and in Kentucky, where he relocated about 1806. He and his family moved briefly to Louisiana in the early 1820s before coming to Texas with Stephen F. Austin's "Old Three Hundred" colonists in 1824. He received a headright grant of land at this site on the east bank of the San Jacinto River and named the home he built here Point Pleasant. A great supporter of Texas independence from Mexico, Scott served in 1835 as captain of the Lynchburg Volunteers, a local militia company. Point Pleasant was a stopping place for many revolutionary-era pioneers, including Lorenzo de Zavala, first vice-president of the Republic of texas; and Emily Austin Bryan Perry, sister of Stephen F. Austin. Married in Virginia to the former Mary Hanna, Scott was the father of five children. Following his death in 1837 and Mary's death in 1840, Point Pleasant was inherited by their daughter, Sarah Scott Williams. After her death in 1860 the property was sold out of the family. Point Pleasant is believed to have been destroyed by a hurricane sometime after the Civil War.

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