Historic Marker: Marshall-Shreveport Stagecoach Road |

Used as a stagecoach inn on the route from Jefferson, Texas to Sheveport, La.
J. B. Henderson House, U.S. Route 59, Marshall vicinity, Harrison County
Marker Text: Before the Civil War (1861-65), the stage road was the main
transportation artery between Marshall and Shreveport, providing a link with New
Orleans for distant markets. Extending northeast from Marshall, the stage road
paralleled the later route of State Highway 43 and passed about 2.5 miles north
of this site. Merging with the route from Jefferson, it turned southeast toward
Waskom. In some areas, iron-rimmed wheels and horses' hooves trampled the narrow
roadbed as much as 12 feet below the surrounding terrain. Travel over the dirt
road was uncomfortable in dry weather and often impossible in rainy seasons.
Regular stage service was established by 1850, with three arrivals and three
departures weekly from Marshall. Arrival of the stage was a major event. At the
sound of the driver's bugle, townspeople rushed to meet the incoming coach. By
1860 Marshall had several stagecoach lines and a network of roads. The Marshall
to Shreveport line was operated by plantation owner William Bradfield and his
son John. The stage continued to run during the Civil War, despite the shortage
of drivers and horses. Use of the stage road declined after the war, when the
Southern Pacific completed a rail line to Shreveport. (1979)