Details for Pearce Chapel-Strip Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5189003960

Data

Marker Number 3960
Atlas Number 5189003960
Marker Title Pearce Chapel-Strip Cemetery
Index Entry Pearce Chapel-Strip Cemetery
Address
City Abernathy
County Hale
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 243364
UTM Northing 3749450
Subject Codes cemetery; ghost towns
Marker Year 1974
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location from Abernathy, take US 87 North about 2 miles, then take FM 54 East about 4.25 miles, then follow local road south, about .25 miles, veer west then, south again .5 miles
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The only landmark of the Strip Community, named for its location on a 1.5 by 15-mile strip of land opened to homesteaders in the 1890s. William Houston Pearce (1844-1926) moved into the area in 1895 and started a school, called "Round-Top", or "Strip". Small groups began to worship in the schoolhouse, and one congregation formed Pearce Chapel Methodist Church. F. E. Andrews (1857-1898) gave a cemetery tract in 1898, and late that year his was the first grave. Strip Post Office opened in 1904 with Postmaster Jerry W. Turner handling the mail in his home. In 1906, a Union Church was built near the cemetery site, which was purchased by public subscription in 1907, in order to clear the title. In 1910 the Strip Post Office closed after service was made available in Abernathy. The school and church buildings were moved to Lakeview in succeeding years, but this cemetery continues to be used. By 1973 it had 180 graves. War veterans buried here include two Confederate soldiers, James E. Fitzgerald and William Houston Pearce; World War I veterans George W. Fitzgerald, George Harkness, and Leroy Mahagan; World War II veterans Thomas L. Goldston, Harvey Shelby Pittman, and John Fred Sherman. 1974

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