Details for Post Oak Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5027012512

Data

Marker Number 12512
Atlas Number 5027012512
Marker Title Post Oak Cemetery
Index Entry Post Oak Cemetery
Address
City Holland vicinity
County Bell
UTM Zone
UTM Easting
UTM Northing
Subject Codes cemetery; settlements; Baptist denomination
Marker Year 2001
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 2 miles north of Holland on FM 1123
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The only physical remnant of the Post Oak community, this cemetery began as the burial ground for the family of Isham McMillin, who acquired land in this part of Bell County in 1855. The oldest marked grave, that of McMillin's daughter Elizabeth, dates from 1857. Several graves, marked by piles of stones or illegible markers, may predate Elizabeth's burial. A large proportion of graves mark the burial sites of infants and children, testament to the harshness of frontier life as Anglo settlers moved into the area. Buried here are members of a number of pioneer families, including the Edwards, Fulton, Sinclair and Ezell families. Isham McMillin, who died in 1861, is buried here, as is another McMillin daughter, Mary (1852-1864). In 1873, Sarah McMillin sold two acres of land to the deacons of Mountain Home Baptist Church for the purpose of building a church and schoolhouse. The Mountain Home church came to be called Post Oak Baptist Church, as did the school and the community. The school consolidated with the Center Lake school district in 1916 and later became part of the Holland public school system. The Post Oak Baptist Church continued to meet until a 1952 fire destroyed the church building and the congregation disbanded. Burials continue to take place in the graveyard, and the Post Oak Cemetery Association, organized in 1951, cares for the cemetery, which stands as a reminder of early Bell County settlement. (2001)
ATLAS_NUM=5027012512

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