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An enlargeable map of the 254 counties of the State of Texas
The following is a list of Texas county seat name etymologies , taken from the Handbook of Texas . A separate list of Texas county name etymologies , covering Texas counties instead of its county seats , is also available.
County Seat
County
Named for
Abilene
Taylor
Abilene, Kansas , a famous cowtown
Albany
Shackelford
Albany, Georgia , the former home of an early settler
Alice
Jim Wells
Alice Gertrudis King Kleberg , the daughter of Richard King and wife of Robert Justus Kleberg III of the King Ranch
Alpine
Brewster
its location in mountainous West Texas
Amarillo
Potter
nearby Amarillo Lake and Amarillo Creek , in turn probably named for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (Amarillo is the Spanish word for yellow )
Anahuac
Chambers
the Anahuac region of Mexico , the ancient capital of the Aztecs
Anderson
Grimes
Kenneth Lewis Anderson , the last vice president of the Republic of Texas
Andrews
Andrews
Richard Andrews , the first Texan soldier to die in the Texas Revolution
Angleton
Brazoria
the wife of George W. Angle , a railroad official who had been prominent in making Velasco, Texas a deep-water port
Anson
Jones
Anson Jones , the last president of the Republic of Texas
Archer City
Archer
Branch Tanner Archer , a commissioner for the Republic of Texas
Aspermont
Stonewall
the Latin word for rough mountain
Athens
Henderson
Athens, Alabama by one of the early residents who came from there[ 1]
Austin
Travis
Stephen F. Austin , who facilitated the Anglo American colonization of Texas and is known as the Father of Texas
County Seat
County
Named for
Baird
Callahan
Matthew Baird , former owner of the Baldwin Locomotive Works
Ballinger
Runnels
William Pitt Ballinger , a Galveston attorney and railroad stockholder
Bandera
Bandera
Bandera Pass , named in turn for the Spanish word for flag
Bastrop
Bastrop
Felipe Enrique Neri, Baron de Bastrop , an early German settler
Bay City
Matagorda
its location on Bay Prairie
Beaumont
Jefferson
Jefferson Beaumont, brother-in-law of founder and Texas hero Henry Millard
Beeville
Bee
Barnard Elliott Bee, Sr. , a secretary of state of the Republic of Texas
Bellville
Austin
Thomas B. Bell , one of the Old Three Hundred
Belton
Bell
its location in Bell County
Benjamin
Knox
Benjamin Bedford , a lightning victim and the son of Hilory H. Bedford , a president and controlling stockholder in the Wichita and Brazos Stock Company
Big Lake
Reagan
nearby Big Lake (which is usually dry in most years as it is located in arid West Texas )
Big Spring
Howard
nearby "big spring " in Sulphur Draw (a popular and often fought for location in arid West Texas ; the spring remains active to this day and is now part of a local park)
Boerne
Kendall
Ludwig Boerne , a German author and publicist
Bonham
Fannin
James Butler Bonham , who died at the Alamo (ironically, Fannin County is named for the commander whose help Bonham enlisted to aid at the Alamo)
Boston
Bowie
Old Boston, Texas , named for store-owner W. J. Boston
Brackettville
Kinney
Oscar Bernadotte Brackett , an early merchant in the region
Brady
McCulloch
Brady Creek , which runs through the town
Breckenridge
Stephens
John Cabell Breckinridge , the fourteenth vice president of the United States (note the change in spelling)
Brenham
Washington
Richard Fox Brenham , a soldier in the Texas Revolution who had practiced medicine in the vicinity
Brownfield
Terry
a prominent ranching family in the area
Brownsville
Cameron
Fort Brown , named in turn for Major Jacob Brown , who died during an attack on the fort in the Mexican–American War
Brownwood
Brown
Henry Stevenson Brown , a commander at the Battle of Velasco
Bryan
Brazos
William Joel Bryan , a nephew of Stephen Fuller Austin who donated land for the town
Burnet
Burnet
David G. Burnet , president of the Republic of Texas
County Seat
County
Named for
Caldwell
Burleson
Mathew Caldwell , a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence and soldier during the Texas Revolution
Cameron
Milam
Ewen Cameron , a soldier during the Texas Revolution
Canadian
Hemphill
Its location on the Canadian River
Canton
Van Zandt
Old Canton, Texas , in neighboring Smith County
Canyon
Randall
Nearby Palo Duro Canyon
Carrizo Springs
Dimmit
The nearby springs
Carthage
Panola
Carthage, Mississippi
Center
Shelby
Its location in the center of Shelby County (the town and county, though, are near the Louisiana border in East Texas )
Centerville
Leon
Its location in the center of Leon County (coincidentally, the town is also located almost midway between Dallas and Houston )
Channing
Hartley
George Channing Rivers , the paymaster of the railroad when it built through the area
Childress
Childress
George Campbell Childress , the chairman of the committee which authored the Texas Declaration of Independence
Clarendon
Donley
Clara Sully Carhart, wife of the founder (& possible homage to the Earls of Clarendon )
Clarksville
Red River
James Clark , the founder of the town
Claude
Armstrong
Claude Ayers , the engineer of the first train to travel through the area
Cleburne
Johnson
Patrick Ronayne Cleburne , a Confederate general in the Civil War
Coldspring
San Jacinto
The cold springwater found at the location
Coleman
Coleman
Its location in Coleman County, which was named for Robert M. Coleman , a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence and soldier at the Battle of San Jacinto .
Colorado City
Mitchell
Its location on the Colorado River
Columbus
Colorado
Columbus, Ohio
Comanche
Comanche
Its location in Comanche County, which was named for the Comanche indians
Conroe
Montgomery
Isaac Conroe , the first postmaster of the town
Cooper
Delta
L. W. Cooper , a supporter of the bill creating Delta County
Corpus Christi
Nueces
Nearby Corpus Christi Bay , discovered by Spanish explorer Alvarez de Pineda on the Catholic Feast of Corpus Christi (Latin : "Body of Christ ")
Corsicana
Navarro
The island of Corsica , birthplace of the parents of José Antonio Navarro , the namesake of Navarro County
Cotulla
La Salle
Joseph Cotulla , the developer of the town
Crane
Crane
William Carey Crane , a past president of the Baylor University
Crockett
Houston
Davy Crockett , former Tennessee member of Congress and defender of the Alamo
Crosbyton
Crosby
Stephen Crosby, former commissioner of the Texas General Land Office
Crowell
Foard
George T. Crowell, owner of the townsite
Crystal City
Zavala
The clear artesian water of the area
Cuero
DeWitt
Spanish word for "hide" or "leather:" cattle was (and still is) a major component of the local economy
County Seat
County
Named for
Daingerfield
Morris
Captain London Daingerfield , who was killed in an 1830 battle with Indians on the site that became the town in the 1840s
Dalhart
Dallam
Its location on the border between Dallam and Hartley counties
Dallas
Dallas
Uncertain : the primary report is that founder John Neely Bryan named it for his "good friend Dallas." This person is variously reported as 1) George Mifflin Dallas , the eleventh vice president of the United States ; 2) his brother, Alexander Junior , an American commodore ; 3) their father, Alexander Senior , United States Secretary of the Treasury around the end of the War of 1812 ; or 4) some other person named Dallas whose identity is uncertain. Additionally, another report has the town being named Dallas as the result of a town-naming contest in 1842.
Decatur
Wise
Stephen Decatur , a Revolutionary War naval hero
Del Rio
Val Verde
Its location on the Rio Grande
Denton
Denton
Methodist preacher and Indian fighter John Bunyan Denton , who was killed in 1841 at the Battle of Village Creek
Dickens
Dickens
Its location in Dickens County, which was named for a J. Dickens who fought in the Battle of the Alamo
Dimmitt
Castro
W. C. Dimmitt, a land owner and developer
Dumas
Moore
Louis Dumas, president of the Panhandle Townsite Company in Sherman
County Seat
County
Named for
Fairfield
Freestone
Unknown .
Falfurrias
Brooks
La Mota de Falfurrias, the grove of trees where Edward Lasater established a ranch
Farwell
Parmer
John V. Farwell, a Chicago merchant and a principal in the Capitol Syndicate , which built the present Texas State Capitol and owned the gigantic XIT Ranch
Floresville
Wilson
Canary Islands immigrant Don Francisco Flores de Abrego, who established a ranch in the area
Floydada
Floyd
Uncertain : The town was originally named Floyd City but was required to change it to avoid confusion with Floyd in Hunt County . The new name may have been created from garbling an intended "Floydalia" on the telegraph to Washington or by the addition of either donor James Price or his wife Caroline's mother Ada to the existing name.
Fort Davis
Jeff Davis
Fort Davis , which was named for Confederate president Jefferson Davis
Fort Stockton
Pecos
Camp Stockton, which was named in honor of Captain Robert Stockton , a prominent navy officer in the Mexican War
Fort Worth
Tarrant
Fort Worth, which was named for William Jenkins Worth , a general in the Mexican–American War
Franklin
Robertson
Old Franklin, the prior county seat , which was named for settler Francis Slauter, who had owned the land on which it was located
Fredericksburg
Gillespie
Prince Frederick of Prussia
County Seat
County
Named for
Gail
Borden
Gail Borden, Jr. , businessman, publisher, surveyor, and inventor of condensed milk
Gainesville
Cooke
United States General Edmund Pendleton Gaines , a sympathizer of the Texas Revolution
Galveston
Galveston
Bernardo de Gálvez , a Spanish governor of the Louisiana Territory and an ally of the United States during the American Revolution
Garden City
Glasscock
Old Garden City, which had been intended to be Gardner City after a local store owner but was misnamed due to typographical error
Gatesville
Coryell
Nearby Fort Gates on the Leon River , which was named after Bvt. MJ. Collinson Reed Gates , a hero of the Mexican War
George West
Live Oak
George Washington West , a rancher who founded the town, paid the railroad to build through it, and paid to build the courthouse after county voters approved moving the county seat
Georgetown
Williamson
George Washington Glasscock , soldier of the Texan Revolution and politician, who donated the land for the site
Giddings
Lee
Uncertain : Most likely railroad official Jabez Deming Giddings , but possibly his brother, the politician Dewitt Clinton Giddings
Gilmer
Upshur
Captain Thomas W. Gilmer , United States Secretary of the Navy , who was killed along with county namesake Abel Parker Upshur when a new naval gun exploded during a demonstration aboard the USS Princeton on the Potomac .
Glen Rose
Somervell
An inversion of the original Rose Glen, selected by the wife of donor T.C. Jordan as a reminder of her native Scotland
Goldthwaite
Mills
Joe G. Goldthwaite, railroad official for the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway who auctioned the town lots
Goliad
Goliad
An anagram of the name of Mexican hero Father Miguel Hidalgo
Gonzales
Gonzales
Rafael Gonzales , governor of Coahuila y Tejas
Graham
Young
Gustavus A. and Edwin S. Graham, early settlers in the area
Granbury
Hood
Hiram B. Granbury , Confederate General
Greenville
Hunt
Thomas J. Green, a general in the Texas Army in the war for independence from Mexico and, later, a member of the Congress of the Republic of Texas
Groesbeck
Limestone
Abram Groesbeeck, a director of the Houston and Texas Central Railway
Groveton
Trinity
A grove of blackjack trees situated between the town and the nearby lumber mill
Guthrie
King
W.H. Guthrie of Kentucky , a major stockholder of the Louisville Land and Cattle Company which owned much of the surrounding area
County Seat
County
Named for
Hallettsville
Lavaca
Settler, widow, and donor Margaret L. Hallett
Hamilton
Hamilton
James Hamilton, Jr. , the former governor of South Carolina who gave financial aid to the Republic of Texas
Haskell
Haskell
Charles Ready Haskell , a soldier killed in the Goliad massacre
Hebbronville
Jim Hogg
James Richard Hebbron, a local rancher, who donated land for the town's railroad station.
Hemphill
Sabine
John Hemphill , an early Texas judge and legal scholar, and later a United States senator
Hempstead
Waller
Dr. G.S.B. Hempstead of Portsmouth, Ohio , brother-in-law of town co-founder Dr. Richard Rodgers Peebles
Henderson
Rusk
James Pinckney Henderson , the first governor of Texas
Henrietta
Clay
Uncertain : The law creating Clay County stated the county seat must be named Henrietta. One theory is that Henrietta was intended as the feminized form of county namesake Henry Clay .
Hereford
Deaf Smith
The Hereford cattle brought to the area by early ranchers
Hillsboro
Hill
George Washington Hill , Republic of Texas Secretary of War and Marine, surgeon , and early settler of the area
Hondo
Medina
Named for the nearby Hondo Creek. Hondo in Spanish means deep .
Houston
Harris
General Sam Houston , commander at the Battle of San Jacinto , and later President of the Republic of Texas and Governor and Senator for the state of Texas
Huntsville
Walker
Postmaster Ephraim Gray's hometown of Huntsville, Alabama
County Seat
County
Named for
La Grange
Fayette
The name of the former home of General Lafayette , the Revolutionary War hero for whom Fayette County is named
Lamesa
Dawson
Selected in place of the grammatically correct La Mesa , so called due to flatness of surrounding region.
Lampasas
Lampasas
The nearby Lampasas River , which was possibly named for Lampazos, Mexico
Laredo
Webb
Laredo, Spain
Leakey
Real
John Leakey , an early settler in the area
Levelland
Hockley
The level topography of the surrounding South Plains
Liberty
Liberty
Uncertain . The town was originally platted as Villa de la Santísima Trinidad de la Libertad , "Town of the Most Holy Trinity at Liberty," in reference to its position on the Trinity and the recent success of the Mexican War of Independence . The mostly Anglo settlers quickly renamed it to Liberty, which is variously explained as a simple Anglicization of the Spanish name or as an homage to their hometown of Liberty, Mississippi .
Linden
Cass
Uncertain , but reportedly named after the former home of a Tennesseean immigrant
Lipscomb
Lipscomb
Judge Abner Smith Lipscomb , a Texian Secretary of State
Littlefield
Lamb
George W. Littlefield, local ranch owner and town founder
Livingston
Polk
Livingston, Tennessee , hometown of founder Moses L. Choate
Llano
Llano
The nearby Llano River , which was named for the surrounding plains
Lockhart
Caldwell
Byrd Lockhart , an assistant surveyor and reportedly the first Anglo to set foot in the county
Longview
Gregg
Supposedly, for the impressive view railroad management could see from the house of Ossamus Hitch Methvin, Sr. , who sold them the land for the town. Possibly ironic, given the town's location in heavily forested East Texas .
Lubbock
Lubbock
Thomas Saltus Lubbock , a former Texas Ranger (some sources have Lubbock's first name as Thompson)
Lufkin
Angelina
Abraham P. Lufkin , a cotton merchant and Galveston city councilman, who was the son-in-law of Paul Bremond , president of the Houston, East and West Texas Railway which developed the town
County Seat
County
Named for
Madisonville
Madison
James Madison , fourth President of the United States
Marfa
Presidio
Uncertain , though reportedly suggested by the wife of a railroad executive from a character in Fyodor Dostoyevsky 's novel The Brothers Karamazov , which she was reading at the time
Marlin
Falls
John Marlin , pioneer and father-in-law of town founder Samuel A. Blain
Marshall
Harrison
John Marshall , fourth Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court
Mason
Mason
Fort Mason , whose etymology is uncertain , though it was probably named after either Lt. George T. Mason , killed during the Mexican–American War at Brownsville, Texas , or for Gen. Richard Barnes Mason .
Matador
Motley
The Matador Ranch , which was located in the county
McKinney
Collin
Collin McKinney , one of five drafters and the oldest signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence , and early settler in the county
Memphis
Hall
Following a series of failures for the town to select a name not already in use, Rev. John Brice fortuitously noticed a letter in Austin addressed to Memphis, Texas, and marked No such town in Texas
Menard
Menard
Michel Branamour Menard , the founder of Galveston, Texas
Mentone
Loving
Old Mentone, which was named for Menton , France , the hometown of one of its early settlers
Meridian
Bosque
Uncertain , though most likely due to Commissioner Jasper N. Mabray's belief the town lay on or near the 98th meridian west . Surveyor George Erath had previously named Meridian Creek and Meridian Knobs for such a proximity.
Mertzon
Irion
M. L. Mertz, a director of the Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway
Miami
Roberts
Uncertain : Reportedly an Indian word meaning "sweetheart," but could also be named for rivers or other cities named after the Miami Indians
Midland
Midland
Its location midway between Fort Worth and El Paso on the Texas and Pacific Railway
Monahans
Ward
Thomas John Monahan, who dug the first water well between the Pecos River and Big Spring in 1881 and selected the site for a water tank
Montague
Montague
Daniel Montague , a state senator and early surveyor
Morton
Cochran
Morton Smith, a land agent hired to sell the property after the death of the original landowner
Mount Pleasant
Titus
A nearby Caddo burial site known as "Pleasant Mound"
Mount Vernon
Franklin
Mount Vernon , George Washington 's homestead
Muleshoe
Bailey
The nearby Muleshoe Ranch
County Seat
County
Named for
Paducah
Cottle
Paducah, Kentucky , the home of an early settler
Panhandle
Carson
Its location in the Texas Panhandle
Paint Rock
Concho
Native American pictographs discovered nearby
Palo Pinto
Palo Pinto
Palo Pinto County
Palestine
Anderson
Palestine, Illinois , the home of an early settler
Pampa
Gray
The Argentine pampas , which George Tyng, manager of the local White Deer Land Company, stated the area resembled
Paris
Lamar
Paris, France
Pearsall
Frio
Thomas W. Pearsall, vice president of the railroad
Pecos
Reeves
Nearby Pecos River , which was named for the Pecos Pueblo , which is of unknown etymology
Perryton
Ochiltree
George M. Perry, an early county judge
Pittsburg
Camp
Major William H. Pitts , who settled the tract of land which eventually became the town
Plains
Yoakum
Unknown , but most likely for the surrounding South Plains
Plainview
Hale
The unobstructed view of the surrounding South Plains
Port Lavaca
Calhoun
Nearby Lavaca Bay , which was named for the Lavaca River , which is the Spanish translation of the original French Rivière de Les Veches , so called because La Salle found so many bison along its shore during his expedition
Post
Garza
Founder C. W. Post , the cereal magnate who attempted to develop the town as a Utopian community
County Seat
County
Named for
San Angelo
Tom Green
Named San Angela by founder Bartholomew DeWitt after an unknown woman named Angela, possibly a nun sister-in-law or a wife Carolina Angela.
Emended to San Angelo after the postal service complained of the ungrammatical construction .
San Antonio
Bexar
Named for the San Antonio River , discovered on the Catholic Feast of Saint Anthony of Padua
San Augustine
San Augustine
Uncertain , but most likely for Saint Augustine of Hippo
San Diego
Duval
Nearby San Diego Creek , presumably named after Saint Didacus of Alcalá
San Marcos
Hays
Nearby San Marcos River , mistakenly named for original San Marcos (probably either the current Colorado or Navidad ), which was discovered on the Catholic Feast of Saint Mark the Evangelist
San Saba
San Saba
Nearby San Saba River , which was discovered on the Catholic Feast of Saint Sabbas the Sanctified
Sanderson
Terrell
Thomas P. Sanderson, a construction engineer
Sarita
Kenedy
Sarita Kenedy , daughter of ranch owner John Gregory Kenedy, Sr., and granddaughter of Mifflin Kenedy
Seminole
Gaines
Nearby Seminole watering holes
Seguin
Guadalupe
Juan Seguín , Tejano soldier in the Texan Revolution
Seymour
Baylor
Uncertain : The most common version is the name was chosen to honor a local cowboy named Seymour Munday, but other versions report that the name was simply chosen by settler J.W. Fullock or that it was selected to honor New York Governor Horatio Seymour .
Sherman
Grayson
General Sidney Sherman , hero of the Texas Revolution and man credited with the battle cry "Remember the Alamo !"
Sierra Blanca
Hudspeth
Nearby Sierra Blanca Mountain
Silverton
Briscoe
Named by founder Thomas J. Braidfoot.
Sinton
San Patricio
A major stock-holder in the Coleman-Fulton Pasture Company
Snyder
Scurry
William Henry Snyder, a merchant and buffalo hunter who operated a trading post in the area
Sonora
Sutton
Sonora , Mexico , hometown of a family servant of landowner Charles G. Adams
Spearman
Hansford
Railroad executive Thomas E. Spearman
Stanton
Martin
Supreme Court Justice Edwin McMasters Stanton
Stephenville
Erath
Landowner John M. Stephens
Sterling City
Sterling
W.S. Sterling , an early settler
Stinnett
Hutchinson
Albert Sidney Stinnett of Amarillo , who helped purchase the right-of-way for the railroad
Stratford
Sherman
Stratford Hall Plantation , the Virginia boyhood home of Confederate General Robert E. Lee
Sulphur Springs
Hopkins
Nearby sulphur springs
Sweetwater
Nolan
Nearby Sweetwater Creek