Details for Ellison Family Graveyard

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5133001462

Data

Marker Number 1462
Atlas Number 5133001462
Marker Title Ellison Family Graveyard
Index Entry Ellison Family Graveyard
Address
City Gorman vicinity
County Eastland
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 534889
UTM Northing 3566552
Subject Codes cemetery
Marker Year 1977
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From Gorman take FM FM 8 east about 3.5 miles, on north side of highway
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The first settler in this part of Eastland County, James Madison Ellison (1840-1923) built a cabin near Ellison Springs in 1858. He married Eliza Jane McGough and was a stock farmer in this area for half a century. As a young man, he was permanently disabled while serving in a militia company defending frontier homes against hostile Indian attack. Ellison established this cemetery after the death of his mother Nancy Baird Ellison (1818-1876), a native of Georgia and midwife for her pioneer neighbors. Although intended for family burials, the plot has always been available to friends and others in need. An unknown child, from a family who camped on Ellison's land as they moved west, died of pneumonia and was buried here. Ellison's son John, his younger son J.T., killed in a fight over a horse, and his daughter Lanie are among the 12 family members interred here. The cemetery contains 26 graves in all. In 1901 the land was legally deeded for use as a graveyard. In 1918 petroleum was discovered in the county, and Ellison leased his land for oil exploration. He moved to the Rio Grande Valley with a granddaughter and her family, and bought a citrus farm. He died there in 1923 and now lies buried in the family cemetery. (1977)

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