Franco-Texan Land Company Building. In the late 19th Century, this building was a centre for political and economic life for the town of Weatherford and for Parker County. It was built around 1870. James Robertson Couts and John A. Fain established the first bank west of Dallas in this building, after Couts made a fortune selling cattle out west. Couts operated the bank with several partners, including Henry Warren, until 1877. Warren, a freighting contractor and thoroughbred stockbreeder, had previously been associated with the Warren freight train massacre of 1871. Couts and Warren dissolved their professional relationship in 1877 and sold the building to Samuel Willis Tucker Lanham, later Govenor of Texas (1903-1907). Lanham practiced law with other attorneys, such as A.J. Hood Sr., in second storey offices. During the 1890s, the structure served as the officess for the troubled Franco-Texan Land Company, headed by Hood. The Company was integral in the development of Texas land between Weatherford and El Paso along the Texas and Pacific Railway corridor. During this period the safe, from the Fidelity and Safe Deposity Company, was installed at the rear of the building. S.W.T. Lanham sold the property in 1906 to William Boone. The Franco-Texan Land Company building, previously known as the Couts Building and the Western Union Building, is an example of a typical vernacular storefront commercial building found in Texas during the last quarter of the 19th Century. The two-storey masonry fronted building features a brick exterior, stone string courses, french doors with fanlight transoms, and double-hung windows. #17253

by Texas Historical Commission in 2012 #17253 of the Texas Historical Marker series

Colour: black

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