Marker Details

Tod-Milby Homesite


Elm & Broadway, SW corner

Houston , 77012

Notes:
David Pomeroy believes that the marker may be in storage locally; per Mary Steed 5/2008 contact Mary Milby Brown, may have in storage; Tod-Milby home built in 1881, razed in 1959, address given as 614 Broadway; JF conversation with Charles Milby 01-15-2015, he is checking with Milby &Tod decedents for information regarding this marker, early response is that it is lost
Directions: Marker site corner of Elm & Broadway, vacant lot on SW corner of intersection

Key Time Period: 1866 - 1876 Reconstruction

Corretions/New Research:

Marker Text: John Grant Tod (1808-1877), a Kentuckian, left home at 17 to go to sea. Served in Mexican, U. S. navies. Came to Texas, 1837; served in Republic navy, 1837-1845, as naval agent, supervising purchase and equipment of vessels of second Texas navy; commander, naval yard at Galveston; acting secretary of navy; commodore. Tod carried official notification of Texas' annexation from the Congress of the United States, presenting it to President Anson Jones, January 13, 1846. Served in U. S. Navy as agent of the Quartermaster's Department during Mexican War, 1846-1848. Assistant state engineer, 1857-1859. Was one of organizers and builders of Texas' first railroad, the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado; came to Harrisburg to serve as its treasurer.



Purchased cottage here and moved into it with his family in November, 1866. This remained the family residence for seventy-six years. Additions made by son-in-law, C. H. Milby, resulted in a large brick house. This structure, known as the "Milby House," was an historic landmark until demolished in 1959. Captain Tod and his family are buried in Glendale Cemetery, five blocks southeast on Magnolia Street. (1967)
Marker Type: Marker with Post
Historical Org: Texas Historical Commission (THC)

Key Map Information: 535 B

GPS Coordinates: 29 43.301, 95 16.729

Precinct No: 2

Marker No: 10728