Fayette County Texas Historical Commission

Fayette County Texas Historical Commission Help people research certain aspects of local history.

12/17/2025

Josh Homan for Fayette County, Texas Judge Campaign 2026

11/21/2025

Fayette County is at a crossroads. With our unique geography and idyllic appeal, we face many challenges, some favorable and some less so. As the wheel of progress turns, our elected officials must identify, understand, and address challenges to ensure this community flourishes while safeguarding the character and charm we all love.

Fayette County needs a leader with a cool head and a fair hand. We need a Judge with an external perspective rather than a view from within.

That's why today, I am proud to officially announce my candidacy for Fayette County Judge.

Our campaign is about bringing citizens together, preserving what makes this county great, maximizing our community's talents and resources, and ensuring good governance for all people.

Join me and fight for Fayette County.

11/19/2025

The Clinic and Retreat will be closed from 11:30am to 1:30pm this Thursday, November 20th so that the doctors and staff can share a Thanksgiving lunch.

11/18/2025

The Fayette County Historical Commission met last night at the Winedale complex outside Round Top. It was a well attended meeting and our Historic Schools Committee gave a great report on the progress in locating and documenting the historic schools of Fayette County. We are working on new markers for each of these schools. If you or a family member have information from one of the county schools please be sure and contact us here or the Fayette Museum and Archives with any information you have. The archives has a great storage system for documents so grade reports and other school activities from the county schools would be a welcome addition to the archives.

06/17/2025
RoxAnn Johnson and Maria Rocha , members of the Fayette County Historical Commission as well as the Fayette Archives sta...
08/22/2024

RoxAnn Johnson and Maria Rocha , members of the Fayette County Historical Commission as well as the Fayette Archives staff, recently attended the Austin County Historical Commission Regional CHC Meeting. The meeting was held on August 17th, 10 am to 3 pm
San Felipe de Austin State Historic Site (220 2nd Street, San Felipe, TX 77473), and took place in the Old 300 Learning Hall of the Visitor Center.

If you haven't visited San Felipe de Austin State Historic Site, you are truly missing a wonderful way to learn about some of our local history.

03/14/2024
Fayette County Historical Commission Meeting March 18, 2024Our county historical commission's purpose is to identify and...
03/14/2024

Fayette County Historical Commission Meeting March 18, 2024
Our county historical commission's purpose is to identify and document local historical sites, persons and occurrences; attempt to preserve those sites that are endangered; and to promote local history.

Historical commission members are volunteers who are appointed by the Commissioners Court every other year for a 2 year term. Our office is located within Founder’s Park on West Colorado Street across from the courthouse and is open by appointment only. We meet every odd month at 6:00 or 6:30 pm at locations arranged by our members. For more information about the Historical Commission please check out our page: https://www.facebook.com/FayCoTxHistoricalCommission, email us at [email protected] or through the county judge’s office (979) 968-6469.
Our meetings are open to the public. The next meeting is March 18, 2024 at the Texas AgriLife Building 255 Svoboda Ln # 134, La Grange, TX 78945. We will have our annual potluck dinner starting at 6:00pm, with a quick meeting so that we can enjoy hearing from our own David Collins about his new book “African Americans of Round Top” part of the Images of America series published by Arcadia Publishing. Information about the book follows:
Round Top, Texas is home to one of the many untold stories that illustrate how African Americans in small Texas towns built and grew prosperous communities’ post-slavery. In 1821 Round Top was an incorporated part of the Mexican empire known as Provincial de Texas. Some of the original Round Top Black pioneers were bought into Texas in 1825 when the Texas legend, Stephen F. Austin, bought 300 Anglo-Americans, and the people they enslaved, into Tejas for the purpose of colonizing the area. Soon afterwards, many more enslaved pioneers were brought into Tejas from other slaveholding states. After the Civil War ended, the descendants of these original Round Top pioneers began building their own community. After leaving the plantations and farms they had been enslaved on, many began earning money by toiling away in the cotton fields for the very men who had once enslaved them. Others earned money working as Cowboys, Washerwomen, Barbers or Blacksmiths, etc. On Sundays, these pioneers would gather together under brush arbors in the woods to practice their religion. In 1867, just two years after Slavery ended, a group of these pioneers organized themselves and founded the historic Concord Missionary Baptist Church. They founded this church as a communal space for them to come together and pool their resources to buy their own land, build their own homes, and to hire teachers to teach both them and their offspring. Because of southern anti-literacy laws, many African Americans came out of Slavery illiterate. After the Freedman Bureau teachers left the area, African Americans needed a safe place, untethered by the restrictive laws of Jim Crow or the Black Codes of the South, to educate their children. Black churches such as Concord Missionary Baptist Church provided that safe place. Concord built its own parochial school. The school was officially named the “Concord Missionary Baptist Church Colored School”. During the early part of the 20th century, many schools in Texas began to consolidate into different school districts. Black schools, such as Concord, because of Jim Crow laws, were not included in that consolidation. They were also not included in that consolidation funding. Instead, they were consolidated under the auspices of a County colored school system which is why Concord School was often referred to by the locals as the Round Top Colored School. In the late 19th and the early 20th century the Round Top Colored school brought literacy to the formerly enslaved and their offspring. The earliest known educator in this school was a man named Calvin Lindley Rhone. Calvin was born enslaved in 1861 in Natchez, Mississippi to a man named Charles Rhone. His wife, Lucia J. Knotts-Rhone was also an educator in the school. She was born in Texas in 1866. Because of the lack of adequate County funding to Black schools, Calvin and his wife Lucia sometimes had to dip into their own pockets to help keep the school running. They were remarkable in that their efforts helped create the first generation of Blacks in the Round Top area who were literate. A few of these literate Blacks, some during Reconstruction, were sent by their families to Black colleges in Texas such as Paul Quinn, Wiley and Prairie View A&M. The Rhones created a family generational legacy of Black educators in Round Top that lasted well into the late twentieth century. Some of the Rhone descendants elected to stay in the area and were responsible for educating a generation of children born to black sharecroppers and Black farming families who owned their own farms. One of the Rhone offspring, Urissa Rhone-Brown, had an educational career that saw her transition from teaching in a segregated school system to becoming Principal of the historic Round Top Colored High School during the desegregation era of the 1970s. There are many more pioneering Black families, such as the Dobbins, who were not educators, who contributed to making the Round Top, Texas Freedom Colony a success story.

The Images of America book series celebrates the history of neighborhoods, towns, and cities across the country. Arcadia Publishing is proud to play a part in the preservation of local heritage making history available to all. “Images of America: African Americans of Round Top” This book is written by David L. Collins Sr. who is a civil engineer who lives in a suburb of Houston, Texas. An avid researcher, Collins is passionate about preserving African American history in Lee, Bastrop, and Fayette Counties.

11/28/2023

Such a great way to see the way things were!

Address

Founder's Park 252 West Colorado Street
La Grange, TX
78945

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