Katherine Ann Porter House
The
is the childhood home of Katherine Ann Porter, one of the
most outstanding American women authors. At the age of two,
her mother died and the family came to Kyle to live with her
grandmother who they affectionately called "Aunt Kat".
At age six, Katherine Ann wrote her first novel. At 71, she
wrote her second novel which earned a million dollars, The
Pulitzer Prize, and worldwide recognition. She placed the
locale of seven of her award winning short stories around
Kyle. She died at the age of 90. In 2000, the building was
given a face-lift, and a museum and write in residence was
added.
Kyle Hanging Tree
Sometime in the late 1840s cowboys from the Kyle ranch were
rounding up stray cattle when they discovered a man’s
body hanging from a limb of a large live oak tree. Not knowing
his identity, they cut the body down and buried it beneath
the tree in an unmarked grave. In the book Famous Tree of
Texas there is a picture and story of this tree, which became
known as the “hanging tree”. The tree is located
in the Kyle Cemetary, and marked the first grave to be put
there
Cemeteries
The Kyle cemetery was used as a community burial
ground many years before the founding of the town in 1880.
It is currently the oldest burial ground still in use in
Hays County. In 1853, Colonel Kyle and his wife Lucy Bugg
Kyle donated 15 acres surrounding a large oak tree.
Claiborne Kyle Log House

The Claiborne Kyle Log House was built in 1850 by slave
labor for Claiborne and Lucy Bugg Kyle and their nine children.
Kyle was a Senator in Mississippi.
He went on the bond of an old friend, Robert Graves, the
State Treasurer, who was accused of embezzlement. A short
time later Graves disappeared and the forfeiture of the
bond was so financially disastrous to Kyle that he sold
his remaining property and came to Texas. The story goes
that he told his slaves, some of whom had been sold, that
he was leaving early the next morning and anyone who wanted
to go with him to Texas to be at the dock. An undisclosed
number of slaves came with the Kyle family.
The log house is built of cedar logs, square
notched at the corners and secured by wooden pegs. Alternate
courses of log and rock grouting and caliche were used.
The 10 by 6 dogtrot opens between two double room sections;
a huge stone fireplace divides the rooms of each section.
The Kyle house is a most unusual type known as the "linear
four-pen dog trot". It is listed in the Terry Jordan
book Texas Log Cabins and a picture and story appears in
the book Nineteenth Century Homes.
The Austin-San Antonio Stagecoach passed
in front of the Kyle home so Colonel Kyle kept up his political
activities. He was a member of the Texas Legislature serving
in the Fifth Senate and the Tenth and Eleventh House. From
the Kyle Log House, five sons went to war in 1861 to serve
the Confederate cause with the Terry Texas Rangers. Four
of the men served under their brother, Captain Fergus Kyle.
Each day their mother went to a spring a short distance
from the house and prayed for their safe return. All five
brothers returned home, but their mother died June 6, 1863.
On September 22, 1980, the Blanco River Bluffs, Inc. deeded
the Kyle Log House to Hays County. A Claiborne Kyle Log
House Commission was appointed to direct the restoration
and maintenance of the house. On May 28, 1981, the Claiborne
Kyle Log House was placed on the National Register of Historic
Places. A Texas Historical Marker was dedicated in 1982.

Kyle Auction Oak
The Auction Oak is the name given to this beautiful tree
by Ann Miller Storm when the author of Famous Tress of Texas
asked her about famous trees in Kyle. It was under this
tree that the auction of town lots was held in 1880. An
official Texas Historical Marker was dedicated in 1975.
The Auction Oak is on the East side of four city blocks
deeded by the railroad for a school.
Fergus Kyle Tombstone
This is the headstone of Fergus Kyle and his wife. The city
was named for Fergus due to the large amount of land donated
for a town site in 1880 when the rail route between Austin
and San Antonio was laid.
Kyle is located
within miles of 6 of the Top 10 Natural Attractions in Texas.
Interesting Facts of Noteworthy citizens of Kyle
W.W. Haupt – developer of Haupt Berry
Terrell Sledge
Rhodes Scholar Cecil Hughson – former
Boston Red Sox pitcher
Dean Edwin J. Kyle – former Texas A&M
professor and man for whom Kyle Field (College Station, Tx)
is named.
Katherine Ann Porter – great American
female writer and Pulitzer Prize winner From 1943 to 1946,
Kyle had an “all-woman” government.
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