Historical Marker

Conrad Fuchs House

Source: Photo by Carole Calysn, submitted April 2009

Marker Text

Conrad L. Fuchs, born in Germany in 1834, came to Texas in 1845 with his parents, Pastor and Mrs. Adolf Fuchs, who settled in Austin County. The Fuchs family moved into this area of Burnet County in 1853. In 1861, Conrad Fuchs married Anna E. Perlitz at Black Jack Springs, in Fayette County, and soon returned to move into a log cabin on this property, which was granted to him by the State of Texas on May 15, 1862. When Fuchs decided to join the Confederate army, he took his wife back to Fayette County, and enlisted in an artillery unit.

After the Civil War, he returned here and built a stream grist and saw mill on nearby Tiger Creek. On Sept. 2, 1872, the "Tiger Mill" post office was opened, and Conrad Fuchs named postmaster. Located on the Burnet-Willow City Road, Tiger Mill became the community center for the early settlers in this area.

In the late 1870s or early 1880s, Conrad Fuchs built this house to accommodate the post office and his growing family of 6 children. It was constructed of field stone in the pioneer German style, with a large central hall, shingled roof, and plastered interior. Mrs. Fuchs held school for area children in the home.

After Conrad Fuchs' death, Feb 16, 1898, Mrs. Fuchs sold the property. The house was restored in 1972-73. (1974)

 


LOCATION: 2 miles SE of RR 2147, 6 miles west of Marble Falls.

Note:  Despite its historical designation, this site has been subjected to vandalism and is in a deterioriating condition.  The Burnet County Historical Commission is attempting to contact the current owner(s) and save the home.

 

See complete list of Burnet County Historical Markers

 

 

Burnet TXGenWeb

GO TO
Burnet Main Page | Photo Album | Military | Lineages | Marriages | Obituaries |


You are our [an error occurred while processing this directive] visitor to this page.

Last update:  Wednesday, 19-Jul-2023 05:26:43 MDT