In 1873 San Marcos built a small stone jail — a calaboose — and for generations it did the grim work of a segregated Texas town's lockup. In the 1990s that same building was reclaimed as the Calaboose African American History Museum, turning a symbol of confinement into a keeper of Black history. This driving tour follows that thread across the neighborhoods where African American San Marcos built its own institutions: the museum in the old jail, the churches and school that anchored the community, and the birthplace claim of Eddie Durham — the pioneering jazz guitarist and arranger who helped invent the electric guitar's role in big-band music and wrote for Count Basie and Glenn Miller. It's a tour about a community that made a life and a culture of its own inside the hard limits of a segregated town.
TEXAS ROAM PRESENTS
The Calaboose: African American San Marcos
From a stone jail to a jazz legend
A self-guided driving tour · Civil Rights
6 stops · ~30 min · 2.2 mi · Driving tour
Driving tourCivil Rights6 stops2.2 mi~30 minTexasRoam+
About this tour
Where it starts
The tour begins in San Marcos. Open Texas Roam to follow the full route stop by stop, with directions and audio narration as you go.
📍 General area · Starts in San Marcos
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