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Taken 11-Sep-15
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Dimensions4928 x 3264
Original file size12.1 MB
Image typeJPEG
Color spacesRGB
Date taken11-Sep-15 17:01
Shooting Conditions

Camera makeNIKON CORPORATION
Camera modelNIKON D7000
FlashNot fired, compulsory mode
Exposure modeAuto
Exposure prog.Unknown
ISO speedISO 400
Metering modePattern
Digital zoom1x
Captain Jesse Burnam

Captain Jesse Burnam

Marble Fallsbr/Burnet County, Texasbr/30 30.000' N 98 16.000' W Directions: Start at the intersection of CR-401 and SH-71. The marker is on the northeast corner of the intersection.br/ br/Text: Texas Patriot Jesse Burnam (also spelled Burnham), born in Madison county, Kentucky, was the youngest son of seven children. In 1812, Jesse married Temperance Null Baker in Shelbyville, Tennessee. Jesse was a private in the Mounted Volunteers of Tennessee in the War of 1812, serving from Sep. 1814 to Apr. 1815, including the Battle of New Orleans. Jesse, Temperance and family arrived in Texas in 1821, settling at Pecan Point (Red River County). By 1823, they were among Stephen F. Austinrsquo;s ldquo;Old Three Hundred,rdquo; building a home, fortified trading post and ferry service on the Colorado River frontier. Austin commissioned Burnam as a captain of militia in May 1824. Temperance died in 1833, leaving Jesse with nine children. He later married Nancy Ross, who bore him seven more children. Jesse was a delegate to the Conventions of 1832 and 1833 and the Consultation of 1835. He aided Col. James W. Fannin in gathering volunteers and supplies during the Texas Revolution, and Gen. Sam Houston arrived at Burnamrsquo; s Crossing on March 17, 1836, ordering the ferry, homestead and store burned ahead of the advancing Mexican army. Jesse was a Representative in the Republic of Texasrsquo; provisional government and its first congress. Jesse and Nancy moved their family to Burnet County in 1855, following two older sons who had settled here. Jessersquo;s land was southeast of present-day Marble Falls on Double Horn Creek, where he established one of the first sheep raising operations in the area and a large wheat farm. The historic Burnam homestead, now in the familyrsquo;s fifth generation, includes a log cabin, two-story home, spring house, and family cemetery where Jesse, Nancy and others are buried.