Peyton Colony (Board House)
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Raven
N 30° 07.259 W 098° 18.459
14R E 566695 N 3332393
A marker near a rural church about 7 miles NE of Blanco (Blanco County), denoting the harsh beginnings and early lives of the recently-freed slaves who came here after the Civil War to settle this part of the state.
Waymark Code: WM14812
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 05/11/2021
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 3

Marker Number: 16132

Marker Text:

In 1865, a group of freed persons, led by Peyton Roberts, established a community they named Peyton Colony. Roberts was born into slavery in Virginia. In the 1820s, he came to Texas with his owner, Jeremiah Roberts, settling in the Bastrop and Caldwell counties area. Peyton and his family eventually became the slaves of Jeremiah Roberts’ grandson, William, who freed his slaves during the Civil War. The freed families agreed to work for William during the war, receiving payment in the form of supplies they would need to begin new lives.

In 1865, the former slaves moved to this area, establishing Peyton Colony, which was known as Freedman’s Colony to white settlers. The residents mostly farmed; they also built a lime kiln to make mortar for buildings in the county. The community received a Post Office named Payton in 1898. It was discontinued in 1909, but reestablished in 1918 with the name Board House, named for Alfred V. Walker’s lumber home, which housed the Post Office.

Life in the community largely revolved around Mt. Horeb Baptist Church, which organized in 1874 under the Rev. Jack Burch. Members built a log cabin which served as a church and community school on land donated by Jim Upshaw (Upshear). Residents used a cemetery on land deeded by Peyton Roberts; many of the settlement’s early pioneers were buried there. Although the community declined throughout the 20th century, many descendants continued to live here and remnants remained. Today, Peyton Colony is remembered as the realization of the dreams of ex-slaves to establish a community as freed persons.

(2008)
Marker is Property of the State of Texas


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Raven visited Peyton Colony (Board House) 10/10/2020 Raven visited it