In 2017, Craig and Wendi Foster, a hip empty-nester couple living in Austin and working in marketing and fashion, got tired of the grind and went looking for life at a slower pace. That’s when they found and acquired an old schoolhouse in Martindale. The population of this former agricultural town in Central Texas waned in the late 1960s, but the town remains a hot spot among paddlers dipping into the San Marcos River, as well as for filmmakers (Richard Linklater’s
The Newton Boys and Sundance entry
Sister Aimee were shot there).
The Martindale Schoolhouse, designated a Texas Historical Landmark just this year, is one part short-term rental, and with the pairing of the Martindale Social Hall, another part event venue. The combined facility celebrates the history of the town while providing chic accommodations on a street off the banks of the San Marcos River.
Martindale Schoolhouse, 101 Lockhart St., Martindale. 512-656-8896; martindaleschoolhouse.com
Group rentals run $700 and up per night. The schoolhouse sleeps 14.
“You get so busy raising kids and working for a corporation,” says Craig, a new member of the town’s historic commission. “Austin is very fast-paced. At a certain point in life, some of us start thinking of an escape plan. We wanted a different life and we took a risk, sold our Austin house, and bought the schoolhouse.”
The schoolhouse, a Mission Revival-style building with arched windows and doorways, was built in 1921 and designed by C. H. Page Bros. Architects, whose work includes the Travis and Hays county courthouses. The Martindale School, as it was called while in operation until 1968, was the center of Martindale life during the cotton- and corn-seed boom that occurred up until the ’60s. During that time, it served as a meeting place as well as a school building.
Then, in the late ’60s, rural towns across the country saw a demographic shift as families moved to suburban and urban areas. Martindale was no exception; the town’s population began to shrink as nearby San Marcos grew. In 1965, a measure passed to merge the two school districts, and while the Martindale School continued to operate as part of the San Marcos Independent School District, it closed three years later, in ’68. Since shuttering, the schoolhouse has gone through various incarnations, including an antiques mall, an auto repair shop, and a private residence.