Details for Greathouse Community, Church, and Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5139007107

Data

Marker Number 7107
Atlas Number 5139007107
Marker Title Greathouse Community, Church, and Cemetery
Index Entry Greathouse Community, Church, and Cemetery
Address
City Maypearl
County Ellis
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 693154
UTM Northing 3575296
Subject Codes cemetery; churches; ghost towns
Marker Year 1978
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Greathouse Road west of Dawson Road
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Greathouse Community, Church, and Cemetery Archibald and Mary Greathouse, who settled in this area in 1848, gave their name to a creek and rural community that grew up here. The church, school, and cemetery that formed the focal point of community life were located on land deeded in 1881 by Ezekiel M. Brack, and on property deeded later by Martin Judy Dawson and George W. Whitefield. John Edward Dawson hauled lumber from Waxahachie by oxcart to erect the Greathouse Missionary Baptist Church building. Other early church leaders included Martin Judy Dawson, Jr., Caswell R. Tirey, and Thomas A. Tirey. The Rev. John Bailey was the first pastor. In the 1890s, a school was begun in the church building. Oldest known grave in the cemetery is that of Nancy Caroline Sims (1828-1881). When the railroad reached nearby Maypearl in 1904, many residents moved there and Greathouse began to decline. The school closed in 1912 and the church about 1927. The frame building was razed in 1958. A cemetery association, formed in 1974, maintains the burial ground. This community produced four Christian ministers: the Rev. Joseph M. Dawson (1879-1973), a prominent Baptist leader; the Rev. Everett H. Tirey; the Rev. J.W. Whitefield, Jr.; and the Rev. Austin Woodard. Another resident, Judge Jake Tirey, served on the Texas Court of Civil Appeals. (1978)

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