Monday, December 31, 2012

The VanPelts of Uvalde County


Capt. T. M. G. (Malcolm) Van Pelt was one of the early settlers to the Frio Canyon, a long wide valley with the Frio River running through it's center. He was born in Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, in July of 1831. His great-grandfather was a soldier in the war of the revolution.

He came to Texas in 1853 and settled first at Gonzales, then moved to Prairie Lea in Caldwell County in 1854. He bought cattle there and drove them to the Hondo River in 1855. In 1860 he moved and settled in Frio Canyon, Uvalde County. He had a fine ranch and farm fronting the river. At this time, the area of the Frio Canyon was regularly raided by Indian war parties. Capt. Van Pelt was an experienced Indian fighter but was also said to have been always running over with fun and practical jokes.


T. M. G.
VANPELT

BORN
JULY 15, 1831

DIED
DEC. 10, 1910

Gravestone of Capt. Malcolm Van Pelt





Gravestone of California Elizabeth Elam, wife of Malcolm Van Pelt

C. E. VANPELT
(California Elizabeth Elam VanPelt)

BORN
JAN. 1, 1836

DIED
NOV. 21, 1914



Joseph M. Van Pelt, the son of Malcolm Van Pelt and California Elizabeth Elam, was born at Prairie Lea, Caldwell County, Texas, on the last day of May, 1857. That was a noted year to old Texans, and called by some of them the "starving year." It was a year of great drought, when no crops were made, and many families went without bread for weeks at a time.

When Joe was about 3 years old the Van Pelts moved to Frio Canyon. One of the first things Joe became familiar with as he grew up was moccasin tracks and the almost constant alarm of Indians in the settlement. Indian tracks were often seen in the field where they had stolen potatoes and roasting ears. He went on many dangerous scouting trips after Indians when quite young.



J. M.
VANPELT

MAY 31, 1857
AUG. 22, 1912

At Rest
Gravestone of Joseph M. Van Pelt


This post is in memory of my childhood friend, Norman VanPelt, descendant of these Texas pioneers, who is now buried among them in the Concan Cemetery.

Source - Early Settlers and Indian fighters of Southwest Texas by Andrew Jackson Sowell, Pub. by Ben C. Jones & Company, 1900




Monday, December 24, 2012

Mt. Pisgah



There is a historical marker on Farm Road 542, three miles south of Oakwood in Leon County, Texas, commemorating the Mt. Pisgah Cemetery which is believed to be one of the oldest cemeteries in the county. The cemetery is on Ringgold Creek two miles beyond the marker and south of Hwy 542. According to the historical marker the earliest marked grave is that of two year old John W. Orenbaum who died in 1854. As early as 1860 a school was established in the vicinity, in a log building on the Heatly tract.

ADELA ANN
wife of
JAMES COSTON

daughter of
H. M. & ELIZABETH JOHNSON

DIED
Oct. 26, 1867
AGED
18 years 5 months & 5 d's






MATTHEW VANN

Born
Mar. 15, 1819

Died
Oct. 5, 1887





J. H. RICHMOND

Dec. 12, 1890
Aug. 14, 1919

Blessed are the
pure in heart


There are numerous graves marked only with field stones in Mt. Pisgah. Many early pioneers and veterans of the Texas Revolution are said to be buried in the unmarked graves.



Saturday, December 1, 2012

Beaver Dam Cemetery

Bell Family Marker


The above marker was erected at the Beaver Dam Cemetery in memory of the family of John W. Bell who came to Texas from Alabama in the 1850's and settled near Beaver Dam Creek and the small community of Russell in the Trinity River bottoms of Leon County, Texas.

Grave of Uta Bell
UTA BELL

BORN
Dec. 3, 1848

DIED
Apr. 16, 1919

Another link is broken
In our household band
But a chain is forming
in a better land




THOMAS I. JONES

BORN
Dec. 13, 1872

DIED
Aug.a 24, 1916
Grave of Thomas I. Jones


HORTENSE S.

Wife of
W. H. McMillan

BORN
Aug. 8, 1864

DIED
Oct. 31, 1891




Infant
Daughter of
Mr. and Mrs.
Willie Rawls

Born
Oct. 26, 1914

Infant Daughter of Willie Rawls




Saturday, November 24, 2012

Pilgrim Cemetery - Elkhart, Texas

Replica of the Pilgrim Church

Daniel Parker and a group of settlers from Crawford County, Illinois came to Texas in 1833, establishing the newly organized Pilgrim Regular Predestinarian Baptist Church with its adjacent cemetery. The log church pictured above is a replica of the original built in 1848 a short distance from the present day community of Elkhart in Anderson County, Texas. Pilgrim Church is reportedly the first Baptist church in Texas.

Daniel Parker Monument by the State of Texas

REV. DANIEL PARKER

Pioneer Baptist Minister
Born in Virginia
April 6, 1761
Died December 3, 1844

His Wife
PATSY DIXON PARKER
Born January 17, 1783
Died December 1, 1846



Daniel Parker's brother James was granted a league of land north of present Groesbeck, Texas on April 1, 1835. There he and other members of the Parker family established a fort on the headwaters of the Navasota River in current Limestone County. On May 19, 1836, the Parker family became famous when the inhabitants of the fort were massacred by Comanche indians. Daniel's brothers Silas and Benjamin Parker along with their father John were killed and five family members were taken as hostages. One of those hostages, Cynthia Ann Parker, lived with the Comanches for approximately 25 years and married chief Peta Nocoma. Cynthia Ann Parker and Peta Nocoma were parents of the famous Comanche chief Quanah Parker.




ELIZA
KENNEDY

Sep. 3, 1819
Dec. 24, 1881

At Rest





Gravestone of Eliza Kennedy



Our Mother
REBECCA BIRD

Wife of
J. W. WILSON


1857 - 1923




RACHEL
Daughter of
DANIAL PARKER

Wife of
MILES BENNETT
Sept. 27, 1821
Dec. 23, 1843

First Person Buried
in this Cemetery



Rachel Parker Bennett

Pilgrim Cemetery


Read more about the Parkers at the Handbook of Texas Online.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Vanderpoole Cemetery


The small Texas community of Vanderpoole is situated in the valley created by the Sabinal River in Bandera County. It was originally settled in the 1850's and has survived even after being abandoned for a time during the 1860's because of Comanche raids. Vanderpoole is only a few miles from the Lost Maples State Natural Area in the Texas hill country.

Danner Gravestone

MARY JANE
DANNER

SEPT. 16, 1857
JULY 20, 1919

We knew no sorrow
knew no grief
Till they bright
face was missed.
                 ALEXANDER
DANNER

NOV. 11, 1853
NOV. 27, 1916

Our darling one
hath gone before,
To greet us on
The blissful shore.


Grave of E. C. Hall
IN MEMORY
OF

E. C. HALL

B Nov 3
1819
D Feb 8
1893

Erected to her
sweet memory by
those who loved
her, her children.



R.F.
RATLIFF

BORN
JAN. 22, 1865

DIED
JULY 18, 1917

My trust is in God.
Grave of R. F. Ratliff



Mrs. M. D. Chaney
MRS. M. D.
CHANEY

BORN
May 13, 1833

DIED
JULY 11, 1905



Vanderpoole Cemetery


Read more about Vanderpoole, Texas at the Handbook of Texas Online.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

San Antonio's Confederate Cemetery

Robert E. Lee Walk, San Antonio Confederate Cemetery


Just inside the Crockett Street entrance to the Confederate Cemetery is the street sign for Robert E. Lee Walk. This cemetery is part of San Antonio's Historic City Cemeteries complex just east of the downtown area.


Lt. John Green Hall


JOHN GREEN HALL
Lieut Co. I 19 Texas Inf
Confederate States Army
Aug 27 1843            Jan 11 1907


HUGH FRANKLIN YOUNG
Brig Gen Texas State Troops
Confederate States Army
Nov 3 1808            Sep 8 1889
Brig. Gen. Hugh F. Young



Corp. Adelbert R. Dauche


ADELBERT R. DAUCHE
Corp Co C 36 Texas Cav
Confederate States Army
July 28 1813            Jan 10 1868



Confederate Cemetery with downtown San Antonio in background

Friday, November 2, 2012

November 2 - Day of the Dead


Tijerina


This is the final installment and last of the posts dedicated to the celebration of El Dia de los Muertos in San Antonio's Mission Park South Cemetery.



Onofre




Resendez


Thursday, November 1, 2012

November 1 - The Day of the Innocents


Babyland


Celebrations of El Día de los Muertos generally consider November 1st as Día de los Inocentes (Day of the Innocents) or Día de los Angelitos (Day of the Little Angels).

Elena Huerta




Toys are brought for dead children (los angelitos or the little angels), or other ofrendas (offerings) such as the deceased's favorite candies on the grave.

Babyland


Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Concan Cemetery - Uvalde County, Texas


The Concan Cemetery is located about a mile northeast of the Frio River outside of the small community of Concan in Uvalde County. It is a fairly small cemetery but one of my childhood friends and several generations of his ancestors are buried there so we recently made a stop there as we were returning from a visit to Lost Maples Natural Area and Garner State Park.





AMANDA
JONES

DIED

APRIL 8, 1915

AGE 78 YRS


At Rest



Amanda Jones is recorded in the 1910 census of Uvalde County as the wife of Montgomery W. Jones. She was born in 1837 in Alabama and had married Montgomery Jones in 1866.





WILLIAM H.
ROBINSON

Pvt. Texas Frontier in
Indian War

September 9, 1939





From information on the markers at his gravesite, William H. Robinson was a Texas Ranger during the indian wars on the Texas frontier. Census records list William H. Robinson as born in Texas in 1856, the son of Henry M. and Eva Robinson of South Carolina. It appears that he and his wife, Alice E. Smith, did not have children.

Monday, October 29, 2012

El Dia de los Muertos



In communities with a large hispanic or Mexican population, El Día de los Muertos (the Day of the Dead) is celebrated as it has been in Mexico since the time of the Aztecs. During this period, families usually clean and decorate the graves with offerings or ofrendas. The celebration continues over two days. November 1st is to honor children and infants and is referred to as Día de los Inocentes (Day of the Innocents) or Día de los Angelitos (Day of the Little Angels).



People go to cemeteries to be with the souls of the departed and build private altars containing the favorite foods and beverages as well as photos and memorabilia of the departed. The intent is to encourage visits by the souls, so the souls will hear the prayers and the comments of the living directed to them. Over the past weekend, the cemetery of Mission Park South has been filled with families meeting to clean and decorate graves.

Babyland


See Wikipedia for more information on celebrations of El Día de los Muertos.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

The Guenthers


The Guenther Plot
In 1848, Carl Hilmar Guenther immigrated from Germany to the United States. After a short while spent in the midwest, he made his way to south Texas where he initially built a flour mill on Live Oak Creek in Fredericksburg, Texas. Within a few years, he moved his business to San Antonio and located it on the more powerful San Antonio River just south of the downtown area.

Gravestone of Carl H. Guenther
Carl Hilmar Guenther
Gravestone of Dorothea Guenther

Dorothea Pape Guenther


Pioneer Flour Mill has been a San Antonio landmark for over 100 years.






Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Davenport Cemetery

Davenport Cemetery
The first burial in Davenport Cemetery was Mary Ware Davenport in 1852. Mary was the wife of William Davenport, born in Virginia in 1820, who had come to Texas in 1843. The cemetery is on land that was part of a ranch they purchased on Cibolo Creek in 1851. In 1853, William married Nancy Young, daughter of John Young, who had served in the War of 1812. The cemetery is located just beyond the city limits of San Antonio.

Grave of John Young


JOHN YOUNG

BORN
In Knox Co.
Tenn.

Feb. 18
1793

DIED

May 16, 1879





MAGGIE

Dau. of
Wm. & N. DAVENPORT

BORN
Feb. 15, 1885

DIED
Oct. 23, 1887






ROBERT

BORN
Apr. 17, 1861

DIED
Apr. 1867
                MINNIE
BORN
Mar. 12, 1863

DIED
Apr. 26, 1870

Children of William E. & Nancy DAVENPORT