Details for Ottine Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5177013133

Data

Marker Number 13133
Atlas Number 5177013133
Marker Title Ottine Cemetery
Index Entry Ottine Cemetery
Address
City Ottine
County Gonzales
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 636621
UTM Northing 3274852
Subject Codes cemetery; pioneers
Marker Year 2002
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Ottine, FM 1586, approx. 0.5 mi. from intersection with Park Road 11
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size HTC marker
Marker Text In 1879, Adolph Otto moved to this area with his wife, Theresia, and their eleven children. He and his sons, John August, Louis, Henry and Albert, constructed the family home, as well as a water-powered grist mill and gin. Due to declining health, Adolph moved to San Antonio, where he died and was buried in 1890. John August (J.A.) resumed the responsibility of building a town here. A bridge built across the river attracted new settlers, and the Otto brothers assisted others with establishing businesses in the new town, named Ottine in 1892. Community members used this site as a burial ground, and the first marked grave dates to 1888. J.A. officially deeded the property to the public in 1929, and the cemetery was in continuous use as the town grew in the first half of the 20th century with a rail line and a brief oil boom. After the 1950s, as people moved into larger cities nearby, the cemetery was neglected and fell into a state of disrepair. A cemetery association formed in 1987 began restoration, upkeep, protection and research, and the old Ottine school bell was moved to the site. Today, the cemetery is in use again, and the numerous tombstones serve to memorialize the Ottine community and its families. Historic Texas Cemetery - 2001

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