. . . "1806"^^ . . . . "Come and Grind It; Staying Happy"@en . "ca. 1830s-1861"@en . . . . "Changed from Leesburg to Leesville by U.S. Postal Service"@en . . "US"@en . "Captain C.S.A., rank of Sandies Home Guard commanding officer"@en . . "31543.1424"^^ . . "Guadalupe River"@en . . "0.12"^^ . . . . . . . . "West Gonzales County;"@en . "-97.74500274658203"^^ . . . . . . . . "Region"@en . . . . . . "Sandies Home Guard"@en . . . . "290"^^ . . . . "1945-07-09"^^ . "81"^^ . "A bluff at Guadalupe River State Park"@en . . . . "TxDOT"@en . . . . . . "yes"@en . . . . "1874"^^ . "Leesville, Texas"@en . . . . . "SE Guadalupe County line,"@en . . . "Proximate primary airport"@en . "Local Government Corp."@en . . "Sandies Creek Iron Rail-Bridge ca. 1899; Leesville historical-marker below"@en . . . . . "52600"^^ . . . "300"^^ . . . "SH80/FM466/FM1682:"@en . . . "79"^^ . . "Leesville SH 80"@en . . . . "3700"^^ . "Succeeding:"@en . "1093172640"^^ . . . "1945-07-09"^^ . . "80" . "auto"@en . . "Critical/endangered"@en . . "103450"^^ . "29.40694427490234"^^ . . . . . "left"@en . . "Capote\u2014De la Baume Leagues"@en . . "Leesville Country Fair"@en . . . . . . "First Lieutenant W. H. Burris;"@en . "Lee Guinn, daughter of founder"@en . . "Traffic"@en . . . . "West"@en . . "Founded"@en . . . . "1932"^^ . . "North"@en . . . . . . "Leesville SH 80"@en . "Special municipally owned corporation"@en . . . . . . . "SH"@en . . . . "State"@en . . . . "78122"^^ . "West Capote"@en . . . "north - Seguin"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Cemetery Association"@en . . . . . . "Country"@en . "Former Seats"@en . . . . "East"@en . . . . . . . "11000"^^ . . . . . . . . "Proximate rail"@en . . . . "360.0"^^ . . "POINT(-97.745002746582 29.406944274902)"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "SE Guadalupe County line;"@en . . . "Late-1800s:"@en . . . "West of Bebe"@en . "Leesville is below and the Guadalupe River"@en . . "31.5431424"^^ . . . . . "29.406944444444445 -97.745" . . . . "25"^^ . . . . . . . . . "Guadalupe Courthouse"@en . . "SH" . "United States"@en . . . . . . "19.6"^^ . . . . . "Recognized"@en . . . "300"^^ . "32793"^^ . "North of Nixon;"@en . . . . . "East" . "Leesville"@en . . . "FM"@en . . "1861-06-22"^^ . "\"Little Red Schoolhouse Station\""@en . . "Captain Michael Erskine;"@en . . . "Second Lieutenant Larkin N. West;"@en . . . . . . "West" . . . . . . . . . . "Leesville District \u2020"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "300.0"^^ . . . . . . . . "12179"^^ . "24155394"^^ . . . . . . . . "Location"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "TX"@en . . . "\"Leesville Precinct,\""@en . . . "/County Road 121"@en . . . "Granted"@en . "Leesville"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "384"^^ . "South" . "Judge J.T. Melvin,"@en . "80"^^ . . "Map of the Guadalupe River watershed"@en . . "Leesville is an unincorporated city of 384 residents distributed over 51 square miles in the Gonzales\u2014Guadalupe County, Texas area ( SH 80 / FM 1682), electorally known as local Precinct 13; defined by the south of its Capote Hills (\"El Capote Ranch\") at the \u201CLeesville Quad\u201D intersection ( FM 466 / SH 80) and the north of Sandies Creek ( FM 1117 / SH 80 / SH 97), twelve miles southeast of Seguin. Beginning in the 19th-century, the municipal identity of Leesville was founded upon being one of the first Justice of the Peace Precincts of its original county-area, as prescribed in the Texas Constitution; as well as once generally serving as the primary seat of a former Texas House District 90, once rated at more than 1,000 constituents. Straddling and nearing the southeastern border of Guadalu"@en . . . "1647"^^ . . "670"^^ . . . ""@en . . "10"^^ . . . . "east \u2013 Cost"@en . "Preceding:"@en . . . "70"^^ . . ""@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "Electoral Precinct 13"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "SH"@en . "51"^^ . "26"^^ . . "26"^^ . . "Capote's Knob"@en . . . . "Historical, event associations with the Leesville name;"@en . . . "55.348558848"^^ . . . . . . "SH"@en . . "Settled"@en . . . . . "520"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "Texas"@en . . . . "Leesville Precinct \u2020"@en . "Newburn H. Guinn, Developer;"@en . . . . . . . . . . . "in Seguin"@en . . . . "75"^^ . . . . . . "southwest of Gonzales"@en . "north - Gonzales"@en . . . . . "19"^^ . . . "yes"@en . . "55348.558848"^^ . "Third Lieutenant N. W. Guinn"@en . "3"^^ . . "Leesville is an unincorporated city of 384 residents distributed over 51 square miles in the Gonzales\u2014Guadalupe County, Texas area ( SH 80 / FM 1682), electorally known as local Precinct 13; defined by the south of its Capote Hills (\"El Capote Ranch\") at the \u201CLeesville Quad\u201D intersection ( FM 466 / SH 80) and the north of Sandies Creek ( FM 1117 / SH 80 / SH 97), twelve miles southeast of Seguin. Beginning in the 19th-century, the municipal identity of Leesville was founded upon being one of the first Justice of the Peace Precincts of its original county-area, as prescribed in the Texas Constitution; as well as once generally serving as the primary seat of a former Texas House District 90, once rated at more than 1,000 constituents. Straddling and nearing the southeastern border of Guadalupe County, the real estate origins of Leesville go back to the 1800s survey-plots of Texas Revolution figures Ezekiel Wimberly Cullen (late owner of Sandies Creek) and Count Joseph de la Baume of France (late owner of Capote Hills); the latter retaining Texas's founding father Stephen F. Austin as an attorney, to reacquire the early-1800s Spanish land-tract, after Mexico's Independence from Spain in 1825. Divided by FM 1682 joining with Gonzales\u2014Guadalupe County Road 121 West, Leesville's northern territory is closest to the Austin Metropolitan Areas through SH 80 / US 183, while the southern territory is closest to the San Antonio Metropolitan Areas through SH 97 / US 87. In 1844, De la Baume's heirs sold out to newly-elected Judge Michael Erskine, a then-future Confederate Army commander of the Sandies Creek, Leesville area; the namesake of Leesville's founder \"N. Guinn\" serving under this \"Sandies Home Guard\" as a Third Lieutenant in 1861. Erskine held most of the land in the Leesville-area until 1882 when it was purchased by a group of speculative investors, including Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt. The lien on the property was held by the Scottish-American Mortgage Company, Ltd., financiers of the well-known Swan Land and Cattle Co. and Prairie Land and Cattle Co. The original 12-acre residential Capote Ranch headquarters in the \"Alameda\" of Downtown San Antonio, formerly known as \"La Baume Place\" upon the St. Joseph Catholic Church, has since been relinquished and divested from the property. From this time period into present-day, just before and after Judge Leroy G. Denman took ownership, the complexities of this large estate and its jurisdiction have led to direct interventions by late San Antonio mayor John W. Smith; and the Texas Courts of Appeals (its caselaw cited in ConocoPhillips Co. v. Ramirez), through the trust of Trinity University and the San Antonio Museum of Art. As the 19th-century concluded, its expatriate George W. Littlefield acted as a significant Texan architectural patron and proprietor of the Driskill Hotel, the Littlefield House and the Littlefield Building in Austin, Texas; he relocated to what is now Downtown Austin after three of his family members died in a gunfight in 1880s Leesville. During the Spanish\u2013American War, Theodore Roosevelt rode a Capote, Leesville area horse, \"Seguin\", at the Battle of San Juan Hill (1898). Several other horses from the area were used by the 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry (\"Roosevelt's Rough Riders\") as well. During this time, Frederick Law Olmsted, then-future designer of New York City\u2019s Central Park, made the area\u2019s principal species of trees and agriculture as a point of his studies. Through the early 20th-century, rail transport and interurban rail were proposed and built intermittently, including a 1916 Houston\u2014San Antonio electric railway concept and proposal, with Leesville as a main line station. Towards the late 20th-century, the ventures either remained undeveloped or developed then terminated with the rail easements sold to the Lower Colorado River Authority, as an overhead power line. At present, the primary industries of the Capote-Sandies, Leesville area are under the real estate holdings of vast Texas Wildlife Management Areas, and the primary Quien Sabe Ranch that raises Santa Gertrudis cattle of King Ranch Running W Bull descent. The most valuable asset in this area is a $149-million water facility and 40-mile pipeline, that can store and move up to 11.6 million gallons of water towards the Greater San Antonio areas. According to the Texas Department of Transportation, 12,179 vehicles travel through the Leesville-area daily, with the busiest intersection rated at 2,978 vehicles; thru-traffic utilizes Leesville routes to generally bypass SH 123 upon Wilson County\u2014Seguin."@en . . . "South of Belmont;"@en . . . . . "South"@en . . . "466"^^ . "circle"@en . "238.8"^^ . "34.392"^^ . "466" . . . . . "Leesville Farmers' Union \u2020"@en . . . . . "North" . . . . . . . "Postmaster: 78122-9998;"@en . "Sandies Creek , Texas"@en . . . . "2018"^^ . . . . "Texas House District 90;"@en . . . . "East Central Texas forests"@en . "Sandies\u2014E.W. Cullen League;"@en . "FM" . . . "Justice of the Peace"@en . . "ca. 1891"@en . . . "Sandies, Capote, Leesburg, E.W. Cullen"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Map of Leesville roads; Guadalupe River indicated north"@en . . . . .