Nameless, Texas

Nameless is a populated place in Travis County, Texas, United States, with a small portion extending into Williamson County. The community is also referred to as Cross Creek and Fairview. [1] Nameless is approximately 21 miles northwest of downtown Austin, and is a part of the Austin-Round Rock metropolitan area. It contains the Cherry Hollow Subdivision and a large portion of Nameless Road, which extends into both Jonestown and Leander.

History

A post office was established at Nameless in 1880, and remained in operation until it was discontinued in 1890.[2] The locals ended up with the name "Nameless" after several applications containing other names were turned down by the post office.[3][4][5][6]

Nameless was first populated by Scotch-Irish settlers. When the township was being organized townspeople attempted to submit names, one of which was Fairview, to the post office for recognition as a town, which was customary in those days. The post office repeatedly denied the various names because other towns already had claimed them. In a fitting rebut the citizens replied in disgust, "Let the post office be nameless and be damned!" Thus the town of Nameless was born. [7]

The town eventually became a part of the city of Leander, and the Nameless (Fairview) school closed in 1945. The school was restored in 2008-2009, and it and the Nameless Cemetery are all that is left of the Nameless Community.

Nameless Cemetery is designated a Historic Texas Cemetery.[8]

Gray Family and the First Fairview School

The original Fairview School was on 1.5 acres of land donated to Travis County by the Gray family in 1877 about .4 miles east of today's Nameless School. A new Fairview School was built in 1909 on land donated to Travis County by Bell and Rose Turner.[5] The current school is called the Nameless School, according to the official name of the community post office (1880-1890). The land containing the Gray homestead, original school site and cemetery was subdivided in 2024 for a new residential development. The Gray House was relocated across Nameless Road to the Nameless School property (property of Travis County) for preservation.[9]

Tennessee native Hubbard S. Gray (1815-1886) immigrated to Texas sometime in the 1850s. In the 1860 census, Gray is listed as a teacher in San Saba (San Saba County, Texas), living with the family of James and Berthena Crawford, including their daughter Eliza Jane (1822-1882).  Hubbard and Eliza subsequently married.  In 1874, they moved to Georgetown, Texas and later to land purchased from Elias Talbot on Cross Creek (Big Sandy Creek) in Travis County, Texas. The couple built a home, farmed, and raised livestock in the Fairview Community.  In 1877, the Grays conveyed 1.5 acres to Travis County for Fairview’s first community school. Hubbard later presided over elections at the Fairview School.[9]

Eliza died July 12, 1882, and was buried on the family property in what is now known as the Gray Family Cemetery; the cemetery is designated a Historic Texas Cemetery.[10] The cemetery is located approximately 1/2 miles southeast of today's Nameless School inside a pocket park of the Travisso - Leander subdivision. Eliza’s grave is topped with a locally carved limestone monument, surrounded by a late nineteenth century wrought iron fence. Potentially, two or more others are interred near Eliza:  Hubbard is thought to be buried next to her in an unmarked grave, and an unnamed infant buried on top of her, in a shield-shaped crypt.[9]

Gray House Architecture

As so little remains of the early Fairview Community preservation of the Gray's house was important. It was moved from its original location undergoing residential development, just east of today's Nameless Road, to Travis County property adjacent to today's Nameless School west of Nameless Road.[11]

The Gray house is thought to have been built about 1877 when the parcel of land it sat on was acquired, and from which 1.5 acres were donated to Travis County for a school.[9]

The Gray house is a two room dog-trot, or dog-run, built with techniques bridging old log-cabin construction with those of the late nineteenth century. The house was built on hand hewn log piers and beams; some beams beneath the house are trunks of cedar trees approximately 16’ in length. The rest of the house was built from milled lumber. After the arrival of the railroad in Austin, Texas in 1871 milled lumber began to replace log construction; several planks in the dog-trot bear the stamp of the Van Patten Lumberyard that was located in downtown Austin east of Congress Avenue in the late 1800s near the rail freight depot and visible on the 1887 birds-eye map of Austin as feature #56.[12] While the railroad had reached Austin by 1871 bringing in milled lumber, in 1877 the rail had not yet reached Georgetown, Leander or Liberty Hill so materials for the house would have been brought in by wagon from Austin.

The house is thought to have started as board and batten construction which features walls made of wide load-bearing vertical planks (there are no wall studs), with thin strips (battens) on the exterior covering the gaps between those planks. The battens were later removed and horizontal boards added to some sections of the house. Later the cedar shake roof was covered with tin as was some sides of the house.

Having been continuously lived in for at least 90 years the house underwent a number of modifications reflected in the nails and nail holes one finds in the construction: a mix of old cut nails (square nails) and more modern wire nails.

Many stones in the chimney are incised with a crisscross pattern thought to be the maker’s mark of Avery Briggs, a local stone mason.[5] The same pattern is on Avery Briggs’ headstone, and also a limestone step originally part of the Nameless post office (1880-1890), now on display at the Nameless School. The same pattern appeared on the chimney of the John Jolly cabin (Jollyville, Texas).[13] It is believed Avery and his father likely built the chimney for that cabin which dates to ca. 1866.[14][15]

1882-83 Texas state gazetteer and business directory

Nameless appears in the 1882-83 Texas state gazetteer and business directory. The population is given as 50, having one church and school and exporting cotton, cedar posts, and rails. Weekly mail is from Austin by horse with P.T. Stroud the postmaster and owner of the general store. Austin is listed as Nameless' "banking town", Georgetown its "express office" and Liberty Hill its "telegraph office". Rail connections listed are Georgetown Railroad and International–Great Northern Railroad in Georgetown, and Austin and Northwestern Railroad in Liberty Hill. Instructions are given to "Ship to Georgetown or Liberty Hill".[16]

Nameless on Early Maps

Perhaps the earliest map to include Nameless is the USGS survey of Williamson County, which included the northwest tip of Travis County. It was surveyed in 1885 during the period when the post office was still open. The survey shows the Nameless community center at the southeast intersection of two roads: the road north to Liberty Hill, Texas (today's Nameless Road) and the road east to Bagdad and Leander, Texas. That road would later be County Road (CR) 290 (not to be confused with US 290). Only small sections of CR 290 still exist; most of it has been destroyed by development. These roads were important as the routes to Georgetown, Texas, the county seat of Williamson County, and for reaching nearby Liberty Hill and Leander located on the Austin and Northwestern Railroad as well as the road from Austin to Burnet, Texas, county seat of Burnet County, Texas. While the CR 290 intersection with Nameless Road no longer exists it was across Nameless Road from today's Nameless School and was the original location of the Gray house.[17][9]

References

  1. ^ USGS GNIS Feature Detail Report: Nameless, Texas
  2. ^ "Travis County". Jim Forte Postal History. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
  3. ^ Hubbard, George (30 November 2002). Humor & Drama of Early Texas. Taylor Trade Publications. p. 215. ISBN 978-1-55622-843-8.
  4. ^ Association, Texas State Historical. "The Unique History of Nameless, Texas". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 2025-07-03.
  5. ^ a b c Kercheville, Genny. Nameless: Its History and Its People. Morris Pub., 2007
  6. ^ State Historical Survey Committee. Site of Community of Nameless. Texas Historical Commission marker number 14580. https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=26161
  7. ^ "Nameles TX". Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  8. ^ Texas Historical Commission. Cemetery ID # TV-C080.
  9. ^ a b c d e Travis County Archives. H.S. and Eliza J. Gray of Nameless, TX. Part I: Family Cemetery, Fairview School, Gray House. https://traviscountyarchives.starter1ua.preservica.com/uncategorized/IO_efc54815-d1aa-4b98-9a27-469cfac696e8/
  10. ^ Texas Historical Commission. Cemetery ID # TV-C234.
  11. ^ Koski, Rudy (2023-10-17). "Historical Travis County homestead saved, relocated". FOX 7 Austin. Retrieved 2025-07-03.
  12. ^ Koch, Augustus (1887), Austin, Texas in 1887. Austin, State Capital of Texas, 1887. Lithograph, 28 x 41 in. Lithographer unknown. Austin History Center, Austin Public Library., retrieved 2025-07-03
  13. ^ Austin History Center. Jolly Cabin at original location, photo PICA_34304
  14. ^ "H.S. and Eliza J. Gray of Nameless, TX, Part II: Documenting the Gray House – Travis County Archives". Retrieved 2025-07-03.
  15. ^ Association, Texas State Historical. "History and Growth of Jollyville, Texas". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved 2025-07-03.
  16. ^ 1882-83 Texas state gazetteer and business directory, p. 588. https://www.familysearch.org/library/books/viewer/182645?viewer=picture#page=588&viewer=picture&o=info&n=0&q=
  17. ^ USGS. Topographical map, Texas, Georgetown Sheet, surveyed 1885, 1893 edition. Available at https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/topoview/

30°31′29″N 097°55′37″W / 30.52472°N 97.92694°W / 30.52472; -97.92694