Details for Rossville Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5013004356

Data

Marker Number 4356
Atlas Number 5013004356
Marker Title Rossville Cemetery
Index Entry Rossville Cemetery
Address
City Rossville
County Atascosa
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 529795
UTM Northing 3218097
Subject Codes cemetery; pioneers
Marker Year 1986
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location At intersection of FM 476 and FM 2504, take County Road west to cemetery about 200 yards, Rossville.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Texas statesman Jose Antonio Navarro (1795-1871) transferred land here along the Atascosa River to his eldest son Jose Antonio George Navarro. J.A.G. Navarro (b.1819) then gave 160 acres here to his daughter Maria Antonia Navarro (1845-1922) in 1870, on the occasion of her marriage in San Antonio to Scotsman John C. Ross (1839-1925). One acre at this site was reserved for a cemetery. Ross and his brother William subsequently founded the community of Rossville here after 1873. The first burial was that of Juana Chaves Navarro (1820-1874), wife of J.A.G. Navarro. Other pioneers who lived in this area before the founding of Rossville are buried here. Their family names include Alvarez, Bergara, Castanon, Cruz, Galindo, Gonzales, Tabberer, Tober, Riojas, and Stokes. Confederate veteran Clemente Galindo (1844-1881) and his wife Martha Goins Galindo (1845-1903) are buried here along with many of their descendants. By the 1920s the road to the graveyard was often impassable, so John Ross was buried in the family plot at the Episcopal Church Cemetery (1 mi. E). His wife Maria Antonia is buried here, near their home site. Other Navarro, Chaves, and Ross descendants are also buried here, including Texas Ranger Captain Tom Ross (1871-1946), son of John and Maria Antonia Ross. (1986) Texas Sesquicentennial 1836-1986.
ATLAS_NUM=5013004356

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