Stagecoach Inn of Chappell Hill


The Stagecoach Inn of Chappell Hill is a historic stagecoach inn at Main and Chestnut Streets in Chappell Hill, Texas.
It was built in 1850 by Mary Elizabeth Haller, the founder of Chappell Hill. Mary and her husband Jacob Haller, the town's first postmaster, built the stately 14-room Greek Revival inn along the road from Houston to Austin, where some of Texas' first stagecoach lines, the Smith and Jones, and later the F. P. Sawyers, would stop for the night. Prior to the building's use as a stagecoach stop, it served as a boarding house for students attending college in Chappell Hill. At that time it was called Hargrove House or Hargrove House Hotel.
Charlotte Hargrove, Mary Haller's mother, operated the Inn until 1859; when it was bought by Judge Benjamin Thomas, who operated the Inn until about 1870.
John A. Hargrove, Mary's brother, wrote shortly before his death in 1906 of traveling to "the Cedar breaks" to cut wood for building the inn. Throughout this period, the town of Chappell Hill was a part of a booming cotton-farming economy.
As the cotton economy faded after the turn of the 20th century and highways were built bypassing the town, the Inn fell into disrepair, until it was purchased in 1976 by noted Houston architect Harvin C. Moore and his wife Elizabeth. Moore had often seen the Inn while traveling in the 1920s, to and from Austin as a student and member of the Rice University band, and had dreamed of one day bringing it back to life. At the completion of the Moores' restoration, it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Inn continued to be operated as a bed and breakfast for many years. However, the property was put up for sale in 2014, and the Inn's website is no longer available.