Historical Markers of Texas logo

Historical Markers of Texas

Back to Travis County

Moore-Hancock Farmstead

Austin, Travis County

Marker Text

Irish native Martin Moore and his wife, Elizabeth Ann (White), left their Austin residences and prosperous Pecan (6th) Street mercantile business and moved to a farm north of town about 1850. Their 521-acre farm, which included this property, was inherited by Elizabeth in 1846. The Moores built the original framework of these sensitively restored log structures and out buildings at this site as early as 1849. Although modified over the years, they represent a rare surviving example of local pioneer farmstead architecture. The Moores engaged in stock raising and farming and reared five children here. In 1866 Elizabeth Moore, by then widowed, sold this homestead tract to John Hancock, a prominent local judicial and political figure. Although Hancock never lived on the farm, it is believed that his former slave, Orange, and his family lived here in the late 1860s. Hancock's nephews, William and James, lived and worked on the farm at different times during the 1870s and 1880s. Franz Fiset purchased the farm in 1899. The structures were significantly altered by several subsequent owners before falling into disrepair by the mid-1980s. Major restoration of the complex was initiated following condemnation of the property by the city in 1987. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 1992

Marker Details

Address 4811 Sinclair Ave
Location Description
Marker # 15032
Dedicated 1992
Size, Type 27" x 42"
Code farms; houses, residential buildings; cabins, log houses
Latitude, Longitude 30.32107, -97.741766

Map