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*Board Certified in Personal Injury Trial Law - Texas Board of Legal Specialization
Concentrating in Bodily Injury & Wrongful Death Cases including Auto, Motorcycle & Trucking Accidents, On-The-Job Accidents, Unsafe Equipment & Products

Huntsville, Texas Lawyers

Roberts & Roberts Law Firm specializes in personal injury and wrongful death cases including trucking accidents, motorcycle accidents and car wrecks. Our lawyers have successfully handled cases in Huntsville, Texas and throughout East Texas. Contact us for a prompt reply.


HUNTSVILLE, TEXAS. Huntsville, seat of Walker County, is at the junction of Interstate highways 45 and 75, U.S. Highway 190, and Texas highways 19 and 30 at the approximate center of the county (at 30°43' N, 95°33' W). It was founded in 1835 or 1836 by Pleasant and Ephraim Gray as an Indian trading post and was named for Huntsville, Alabama, former home of the Gray family. The city originally lay within the northeast section of Montgomery County, which was organized in 1837. It was designated the seat of Walker County when the county was organized in 1846. Huntsville acquired a post office on June 9, 1837, with Ephraim Gray as the first postmaster. The Grays' trading post was well situated to trade with the Bidai, Alabama, and Coushatta Indians. Relations between these groups and the early settlers around Huntsville appear to have been peaceful. As trade along the Trinity River grew and as colonists arrived to exploit timber and rich alluvial bottomlands, Huntsville became the center of increasing activity. The 1840s and 1850s saw the arrival of a few relatively well-to-do families from the Carolinas, Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee, along with larger numbers of yeomen. Visitors such as Gustav Dresel, N. Adolphus Sterneq (a business associate of Alexander McDonald, who built the first brick building in the community), and William Bollaert recorded their impressions of early Huntsville, as did Melinda Rankin, an early resident. Huntsville was also the home of many prominent early Texans, including Sam Houston, Henderson King Yoakum, Samuel McKinney, Robert Goodloe Smither, and Anthony Martin Branch.

Learn more at The Handbook of Texas Online.

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903-597-6000 or 1-800-248-6000
All calls are answered 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
118 W. Fourth Street • Tyler, Texas 75701
(Beside Bergfeld Park on Broadway) • Map
The Initial
Consultation is Free.
The attorney’s fee is a percentage of your recovery. You are not obligated to pay for any attorney’s fee, court costs or other legal expenses unless you are compensated.