A complete guide to a part of the Hill Country — Texas blue topaz, serious wine without the crowds, a beautiful sandstone square, and the home of Old Yeller.
Mason is a town of 2,121 people at 1,529 feet elevation, the county seat of Mason County, sitting 110 miles northwest of Austin and 112 miles north of San Antonio on the Edwards Plateau. It calls itself the "Gem of the Hill Country" — and unlike most small-town slogans, this one is literally true: Mason County is the only place on Earth where you can find Texas blue topaz, the official state gemstone. But the metaphor runs deeper than geology. Mason has one of the most beautiful town squares in Texas, a wine scene that rivals Fredericksburg's quality without the crowds, and a frontier history that includes a U.S. Army fort, the HooDoo War, and the real Old Yeller.
The area was first settled around 1846, but the town formed after the establishment of Fort Mason by the U.S. War Department on July 6, 1851, as a front-line defense against Kiowa, Lipan Apache, and Comanche tribes. Robert E. Lee was stationed here as a lieutenant colonel in 1856 — his last command before the Civil War. The town was established and voted county seat in 1861.
After the Civil War, Mason became the site of the infamous "HooDoo War" of 1875 — a violent conflict over cattle rustling between returning Confederate veterans and German ranchers, one of the bloodiest feuds in Texas history. The town's heritage is heavily German; the legacy was strong enough that during World War I the local Council of Defense formally resolved to abandon the German language in the county. The sandstone architecture of the square, built from local stone in the 1880s and 1890s, remains remarkably intact.
Mason is also the hometown of Fred Gipson, author of Old Yeller (1956) — the novel that became the classic Disney film, set in the Mason County landscape.
Texas blue topaz. Mason County is the exclusive source of the Texas state gemstone. Visitors can hunt for topaz on private ranches (with permission) or see the largest specimen ever found at the Mason Square Museum.
Wine country without the crowds. Mason's wine scene has grown quietly into something serious. Tasting rooms like Parr Vineyards, Fly Gap Winery, Sandstone Cellars, and Robert Clay Vineyards pour excellent wines in intimate settings — no tour buses, no bachelorette parties.
The town square. Recognized by Texas Monthly as one of the five most beautiful squares in the state — 19th-century sandstone buildings, the 1928 Odeon Theater, and a walkable cluster of shops, restaurants, and tasting rooms.
| Attraction | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Mason Square Museum | Museum | Native American history, the HooDoo War, and German settlement — and the largest Texas topaz ever found. |
| Fort Mason | Historic Site | Reconstructed officer's quarters on the 1851 frontier fort where Robert E. Lee was stationed. Hilltop views of town. |
| The Odeon Theater | Cinema / Venue | Restored 1928 theater — arthouse and classic films, live concerts. Screened the premiere of Disney's Old Yeller in 1957. |
| Seaquist House | Historic Home | A 22-room Italianate mansion built in 1887. Tours the first Saturday of each month. |
| Mason House Hotel | Historic Lodging | Dating to 1869, with a sweeping wooden balcony anchoring the downtown square. |
| Eckert James River Bat Cave | Nature Preserve | A Nature Conservancy site — ~4 million Mexican free-tailed bats, the largest bat nursery in the U.S. Open May–October. |
| Parr Vineyards & Cellars | Winery | Downtown tasting room. wines from French, Spanish, and Portuguese varieties. |
| Fly Gap Winery | Winery | In a 1916 building (Mason's first theater). Earthy red blends and lively local events. |
| Sandstone Cellars | Winery | Pioneered viniculture in Mason. Excellent local wines in a historic setting. |
| Robert Clay Vineyards | Winery | Complex red wines with extended barrel aging. Serious winemaking. |
| William Chris Wines Tasting Room | Winery | A tasting room from a co-founder of one of Texas's largest wineries — artful merlot and cabernet. |
The Llano River flows east through Mason County — kayaking, floating, and fishing amid towering banded rock formations, quieter and more remote than the stretches near Llano.
The Eckert James River Bat Cave Preserve (Nature Conservancy) is one of the most spectacular wildlife experiences in Texas. From May through October, roughly four million Mexican free-tailed bats emerge at dusk in a spiraling column that takes 20+ minutes to fully exit the cave — the largest bat nursery in the United States.
Topaz hunting is available on private ranches (ask at the Chamber of Commerce for current access). The gems turn up in streambeds and eroded granite outcrops — most clear or pale blue, with the sky-blue specimens rare and prized. The Comanche Creek Golf Course is a nine-hole course built and maintained entirely by community volunteers, and the spring wildflower drives — especially the back roads between Mason and Castell — are exceptional.
| Establishment | Type | Known For |
|---|---|---|
| Cooper's Original Pit Bar-B-Q | BBQ | Founded in Mason in 1953 — before the Llano location. The original, pit-smoked over mesquite. |
| Santos Taqueria | Tex-Mex | Companion to Sandstone Cellars — authentic cuisine drawn from the Silerio family's Durango heritage. |
| Willow Creek Café & Club | Café / Bar | "Texas-sized" pancakes, hearty tacos, cocktails, and pies. |
| Murphy Creek Cellars | Winery / Bar | Monthly bingo nights that pair wine tasting with community fun. |
| James River Icehouse | Bar / Music | Live music, a relaxed atmosphere, and cold beer. |
| Event | When | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mason Art & Wine Festival | April & October | Fine art, Hill Country wine, and live music on the square. Bi-annual. |
| Mason Chamber Music Festival | April | High-caliber classical chamber music in intimate settings like the Odeon Theater. |
| Mason County Round-Up Weekend | July | Rodeo, parade, arts & crafts festival — the big annual event. |
| Old Yeller Days | Late September | Honoring Fred Gipson — a dog parade, lookalike contests, and storytelling. |
| Wild Game Dinner | November | Chamber of Commerce fundraiser — a wild game buffet and prize drawings. |
| Light Up Our Town | November | Christmas kickoff — holiday lights, Santa on a fire truck, train rides, a luminaria trail. |
Getting there: From Austin, take TX-71 West to TX-29 West — about 2 hours (110 miles). From San Antonio, take US-87 North through Fredericksburg — about 2 hours 40 minutes (112 miles). The drive up from Fredericksburg via US-87 is particularly scenic.
Best time to visit: Spring (April–May) for wildflowers and the Art & Wine Festival. Fall (September–October) for Old Yeller Days, pleasant weather, and the bat emergence. The bat cave is only open May–October.
Local tips:
Mason sits at the western end of the granite corridor and makes an easy anchor for the quieter northwest Hill Country:
The RM 152 drive east from Mason through Castell to Llano — following the Llano River across low-water crossings — is one of the finest back-road drives in the Hill Country.
Mason is what happens when a Hill Country town builds a wine scene without losing its soul. The wineries here aren't corporate ventures — they're local families who grew grapes before anyone was paying attention, now producing wines that compete with Fredericksburg's best at a fraction of the pretension. The square is intact because nobody tore it down. The Odeon still shows movies because the community decided it should. Mason is the Hill Country for people who've already done Fredericksburg and want something quieter, deeper, and more real.