#1.
Goliad, TX
If you time your visit to coincide during the first Saturday of each month, you can catch their market ... More on NileGuide
It's a place where the energy of past sacrifices electrifies the atmosphere of the whole town. More on Epinions.com

#2.
Goliad, Texas
Both a state park and international historic site, this site has a reconstructed birthplace and a statue of one of Mexico's most famous military figures, Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza (1829 -62). The Mexican general and liberal leader was ... More on traveltex

#3.
108 Park Rd 6, Goliad, Texas
Goliad SHS administers four historic sites in the vicinity of Goliad. Mission Espiritu Santo is a restored ... More on MuseumsUSA.org
There is a nice gift shop for souvenirs with clean restrooms. More on TripAdvisor

#4.
Coleto Creek Park Rd, Goliad, Texas, USA
This 190-acre recreation area on the Coleto Creek Reservoir features facilities for RV and tent camping, cabins, picnicking, rest rooms, laundry facilities, fishing and boating. Includes a 200-foot lighted fishing pier, mountain bike ... More on traveltex

#5.
205 S Market, Goliad, Texas 77963, USA
This quaint structure with a cupola on the courthouse square was first used Aug. 30, 1853. In 1886, the building became a firehouse with meeting hall. The local volunteer fire department used the building ... More on traveltex

#6.
Goliad, Texas

#7.
Po Box 57, Goliad, TX 77963
The Presidio La Bahia (fort on the bay) and Our Lady of Loreto Chapel were constructed in 1722 on the original site of LaSalle's doomed Fort St. Louis -- It has been owned ... More on MuseumStuff.com
Most people have heard about the Alamo and how many lives were lost there and many have visited this attraction in downtown San Antonio. However, many don't realize that this presidio in Goliad is ... More on TripAdvisor

#8.
Goliad TX 77963, United States of America
Inscription. After battle of Coleto (March 19 20, 1836), where a Texas Army under Col. James Walker Fannin met defeat by Mexicans in superior numbers, the Texas soldiers were held in Presidio La Bahia, supposedly as war prisoners. ... More on HMDB

#9.
Goliad TX 77963, United States of America
Inscription. When the Civil War ended in April 1865, many Texans returned to find their farms and ranches neglected, their cattle running wild and unbranded. The Federal troops sent to occupy Texas in June 1865 could not control the ... More on HMDB

#10.
108 North Courthouse Square, Goliad TX 77963, United States of America
Inscription. A cyclone, considered one of the two most disastrous in Texas history, struck Goliad on Sunday, May 18, 1902. The twister touched down on the south side of the San Antonio River at 3:35 p.m. Sounding like a heavily loaded ... More on HMDB
