Site of Hockaday Homestead
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 33° 26.226 W 095° 52.097
15S E 233342 N 3703425
Texas Historical Marker on the south side of FM 64, just east of its intersection of FM 904, noting this as the site of the homestead of educator, Thomas Hart Benton Hockaday, with a nod to his daughter, a noted educator in her own right.
Waymark Code: WMV7CX
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 03/08/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 3

Marker Number: 8897

Marker Text:
After a noted career as an educator and founder of Giles Academy (4 mi. east), Virginia-born Thomas Hart Benton Hockaday (1835-1918) bought more than 280 acres in this area in 1870. He farmed the land and built and operated a cotton gin. He later sold much of the property but maintained an eighty-acre homestead on this site for his wife Maria and their seven children. Following Maria's death in 1881, he married Misouri Bird in 1892. Hockaday sold his property to Laurence Pickard in 1916 and moved to Ladonia (4.5 mi. west) where he spent the remaining two years of his life. Pickard moved the Hockaday house in 1921 and divided it into rent houses for the farm's employees. Although the house itself is gone, the existing barn was constructed from Hockaday's cotton gin. T.H.B. Hockaday's youngest child, Ela (1875-1956), followed her father's footsteps into education. In 1913, at the peak of a teaching career that began at age eighteen, she established the Hockaday School in Dallas. In the thirty-three years she was with the institution, the Hockaday School earned national recognition as an excellent college preparatory school for girls. Ela Hockaday was instrumental in the founding of the Hockaday Alumnae Association which continues to carry on the Hockaday tradition. (1981, 1998)


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