Details for Skinner Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5121011847

Data

Marker Number 11847
Atlas Number 5121011847
Marker Title Skinner Cemetery
Index Entry Skinner Cemetery
Address Debbie Ln.
City Pilot Point
County Denton
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 690707
UTM Northing 3696077
Subject Codes cemetery
Marker Year 1997
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Skinner Cemetery, east side of Debbie Lane, approximately 0.3 miles south of US 377
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text In the early days of Pilot Point, Lucinda (Glasscock) and Richard Skinner set aside a 2.44-acre piece of land to be used as a cemetery. The first recorded burial was that of 5-year-old Josiah Taylor in March of 1858; his father, Josiah Sr., died the following July. Predominantly of Anglo-Saxon Protestant descent, most of those buried here came from Kentucky, Virginia, Missouri, Arkansas, and Tennessee. Many were farmers or ranchers. Significant graves include that of J. D. Merchant, Sr., a local businessman who built the first brick building in the area. Also here are several victims of yellow fever, including Prissie and Sarah Wilson, sisters who died within 2 months of one another during the epidemic of 1872 and 1873. Two people named James Graham, born on the same date two years apart, died on the same September day in 1867. Lucinda Skinner, the last charter member of the Pilot Point First Baptist Church, died in 1890. By 1900, there were probably 200 graves in the cemetery. The land was sold by John Skinner to the Skinner Cemetery Association in 1905; the last recorded burial was that of Joe Mylo Phipps, an infant who died in 1928. The Skinner Cemetery remains a vital link to the early settlers of the Pilot Point community. (1998) HTC medallion added to post 2012.

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