San Augustine

Known as “The Cradle of Texas,” history walks the streets here. San Augustine is located on historic “El Camino Real” (the Royal Highway, now Texas 21 in this area). Sam Houston walked here; Davy Crockett was feted on his way to the Alamo; and J. Pinckney Henderson, Texas’ first governor, lived here when San Augustine was the eastern gateway to Texas. Several church congregations lay claim as Texas’ oldest: Presbyterian, Episcopal and Methodist (24 miles east, five miles north of Milam).

Somewhere between here and nowhere.

The spaces in between are often the most memorable.

Mission Se-ora de los Dolores de los Ais

Also known as Dolores Mission, was established 1716 by the Domingo Ramon expedition. Abandoned due to French invasion in 1719; restored in 1721 and became headquarters for Zacatecan missions in…

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Things to Do in San Augustine

Let it unfold.

Not everything needs to be scheduled to be meaningful.

Old Town Well

Dug to a depth of 27 feet by slave labor in 1860, the old town…

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Take the long way.

The best parts of the trip are usually the ones you didn't plan.

Angelina National Forest

Nearest entrance about 11 miles south on Texas 147. Camping, fishing, hunting, hiking, four-wheeling, canoeing,…

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More road, less rush.

There's no need to hurry through something worth experiencing.

Ezekiel W. Cullen Home

An early judge of the First District Court of Texas, Cullen lived in this large…

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Pause when it feels right.

Some stops aren't on the map, but they're worth taking.

Sabine National Forest

Nearest entrance about five miles east on F.M. 353.

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Follow what feels interesting.

Curiosity is usually a better guide than a strict plan.

El Camino Real

Spanish for the Royal Highway, also called Old San Antonio Road, the first "interstate" (actually…

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Nearby Lakes & Parks