| Texas and Pacific Railway Historical Marker |

Historical Marker Text
: Marshall's first railroad was conceived as a connection to Red
River steamboat traffic. twenty miles of track were laid northeast to Swanson's
Landing on caddo Lake by 1858. In 1871, the U. S. Congress authorized the Texas
and Pacific Railway Company to build a transcontinental railroad, which would
run along the 32nd parallel from Marshall to the West Coast. Two years later,
the T&P moved its maintenance shops to Marshall. A new passenger depot was
built here at the junction of the Texarkana and
Louisiana lines in 1911-12, where it was positioned to serve both routes. To
complement the nearby Ginocchio Hotel and huge Texas & Pacific shop complex,
and visually to terminate Washington Street from the Courthouse. The railroad's
architect was influenced by the popular prairie school and combined abstracted
renaissance and Mediterranean details on the brick and concrete structure.
Prominent features include a tile roof and wood and plaster accents. A
pedestrian tunnel was added for safety in 1940. The Texas & Pacific depot
remains an important symbol of Marshall's relationship to the railroad, once its
major employer and transportation source.