City of Anna South Well - Anna, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 33° 20.893 W 096° 32.887
14S E 728169 N 3692576
One of multiple water towers serving the city of Anna, TX, this one stands at 109 E 3rd St, proudly bearing the name of their school mascot, the Anna Coyotes.
Waymark Code: WMJ08T
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 09/04/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 5

The Handbook of Texas Online has this to say about Anna, whose population was over 8000 in 2010: (visit link)

Anna is on State Highway 5, Farm Road 455, and the Southern Pacific Railroad eleven miles northeast of McKinney in north central Collin County. Although Collin McKinney settled within a few miles of the future townsite in 1846, John F. Greer, who arrived in 1867, is credited with building the first home and store there. The Houston and Texas Central Railway, at that time building between Dallas and Denison, passed through the area in 1873. By the time Anna was platted in 1883, it had a population of twenty, two stores, a steam gristmill, and a Baptist church. A post office also opened in that year. By 1890 the town had a population of 100 to 200. It incorporated in 1913, with Greer as first mayor. Two years later the Greenville and Whitewright Northern Traction Company built the Greenville and Northwestern Railway between Anna and Blue Ridge via Westminster. The line proved unsuccessful, however, and was abandoned in 1920. Anna's first bank, the Continental Bank, was organized in 1902, and the Collin County State Bank was organized in 1913 with R. C. Moore as president. The population of Anna was 538 in 1929 and 467 in 1931. Some sources suggest that the community was named after Greer's daughter. Others report that the town was named in honor of Anna Quinlan, daughter of George A. Quinlan, former superintendent of the Houston and Texas Central. Still another story suggests that Anna Quinlan was the wife of George Quinlan and the daughter of J. L. Greer. Finally, another story attributes the name to Anna Huntington, daughter of C. P. Huntington, who built the Dallas-Denison railroad line. In the mid-1980s Anna had 855 residents and several businesses. The population was 904 in 1990.
Visit Instructions:
To post a log for your visit to a "Water Tower" waymark you must post "two" (2) photos of the "Water Tower". Include any information you wish to share about your visit. Any log deemed not authentic will be dissapproved and/or deleted.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Water Towers
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
KidWrangler visited City of Anna South Well - Anna, TX 09/18/2022 KidWrangler visited it
sky-seeker visited City of Anna South Well - Anna, TX 08/15/2015 sky-seeker visited it
mskdm20 visited City of Anna South Well - Anna, TX 12/29/2014 mskdm20 visited it
QuarrellaDeVil visited City of Anna South Well - Anna, TX 09/02/2013 QuarrellaDeVil visited it

View all visits/logs