Largely from Arkansas, Tennessee and other
states of the Old South, families started grouping along major waterways such
as the
San Gabriel River and Brushy Creek in what was then western Milam County.
When enough people had arrived, they signed one of four petitions circulated
through the countryside to form a new county. The petitions were presented to
the Texas Legislature with the suggested names of Clear Water or San Gabriel
County. The Legislature agreed to create a new county, but chose the name
Williamson to honor
Robert McAlpin Williamson, a pioneer Texian who was a newspaper publisher,
lawyer, judge and state legislator. Because of a childhood illness, one of his
legs was bent back and he also had a wooden leg extending from the knee,
giving him the nickname
“Three-Legged Willie.”
Williamson County was created on March 13,
1848, the 76th county created in the state and one of eleven that
the Legislature designated that year, along with Hays, Gillespie and others.
The legislative act named
John Berry, William Dalrymple, David Cowan,
Washington Anderson, J. M. Harrell and J. O. Rice commissioners charged
with establishing the county seat and first government. Under a large oak tree
just southeast of the present courthouse site, the commissioners met with
George Glasscock, Sr., who donated 173 acres he owned along the San
Gabriel River to be the county seat, which was named Georgetown in his honor.
A small settlement along the river was already established, with a post office
named Brushy whose name was changed for the new town.
The land was surveyed into lots and streets,
and on July 4th a public sale of lots was held, with the proceeds
going to the county treasury. On August 7th the first election of
county officers was held, with Greenleaf Fisk as chief justice (later termed
county judge), Whitfield Chalk as sheriff, George Williams as county clerk,
Ira Chalk as district clerk, John Gooch as county treasurer, and Harrell,
Anderson, D. H. McFadin and Richard Tankersley as the first county
commissioners.
The first grand jury was held in October
1848 under the live oak tree where the county seat came into being. The first
permanent courthouse was a small log cabin, about sixteen feet on a side, on
the main street facing west toward the town square. From such humble
beginnings Williamson County sprang, with a population that grew steadily
until actually declining between 1900 and 1970. Today Williamson County’s
population ranks it 14th among 254 counties in Texas, a mixture of
old and new, historic and high-tech, and a land with amazing stories to tell.