Details for Atoka Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5083000232

Data

Marker Number 232
Atlas Number 5083000232
Marker Title Atoka Cemetery
Index Entry Atoka Cemetery
Address
City Novice
County Coleman
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 436455
UTM Northing 3539850
Subject Codes cemetery
Marker Year 1996
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From Novice take FM 1770 3 miles west. Turn north onto county road and continue about 1 mile to cemetery on the left fork of the road.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Settlement of this area began in the 1850s with the establishment of Camp Colorado, a United States cavalry outpost. At the outbreak of the Civil War the camp was occupied by Texas State Troops and Texas Ranger units. The existence of the camp spurred permanent settlement in the area, and many families moved here from the southern United States after the Civil War. The settlers established farms and ranches, and the Atoka community included a general store operated by D.A. Parker and S.N. Edenborough, a combination church/school building, and a cotton gin built by D.A. Parker. This cemetery was established in 1880 on land deeded by C.E. Bush. Among the early pioneers buried here are the Rev. Hugh Martin Childress, Sr., a former Texas Ranger and Republic of Texas soldier; his son, Elisha Childress, who served as the first Coleman County sheriff; veterans of the Civil War; and several workers killed in an explosion that occurred during the construction of a Santa Fe Railroad bridge across Jim Ned Creek in 1910. The cemetery, which is maintained by an association of descendants of those buried here, is one of the few physical reminders of the Atoka community and its pioneer settlers. (1996)

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