Details for Sadler Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5099013151

Data

Marker Number 13151
Atlas Number 5099013151
Marker Title Sadler Cemetery
Index Entry Sadler Cemetery
Address CR 257
City Coryell City
County Coryell
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 633059
UTM Northing 3493409
Subject Codes cemetery
Marker Year 2002
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Coryell City, CR 257, off FM 929
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size HTC marker
Marker Text Sadler Cemetery Settlers, including many from Tennessee, arrived in the area around Rainey's Creek in the early 1850s. The community became known as Rainey's Creek until 1871, when the post office changed its name to Coryell City. By that time, the community cemetery had been established on land set aside in the 1850s by Chester Calhoun Sadler (d. 1911) for his family, friends and neighbors. Sadler, a farmer, freighter, confederate veteran and community leader, came to Texas from Tennessee with his wife, Delia Douglas Cowan Sadler, and their children. Ira Bradford Sadler, Delia's son from a previous marriage, was a Confederate soldier and a prisoner of war; he later became a lawyer and served in the Texas Legislature. These individuals and several other Civil War veterans are buried here among the graves of their families and other pioneers. As Coryell City grew, area residents began using church graveyards. The last burial in Sadler Cemetery was in 1940. Today, the site is maintained by Sadler descendants and community members. Historic Texas Cemetery - 2002

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