Details for French Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5291009653

Data

Marker Number 9653
Atlas Number 5291009653
Marker Title French Cemetery
Index Entry French Cemetery
Address
City Dayton
County Liberty
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 320208
UTM Northing 3329273
Subject Codes cemetery; French immigrants/immigration
Marker Year 1986
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 2.5 mi. NE of Dayton on W side of FM 1008
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text According to local tradition, this cemetery derives its name from a group of French settlers who were killed and buried near the site sometime during the 18th century. Although no physical evidence of the French burials has been found, the name has been in common use for more than 100 years. Referred to in the mid-1800s as the Pruett Family Cemetery, the graveyard is located on land acquired by Beasley Pruett from the Mexican government in 1824. Upon his death in 1835, Pruett was buried on his land grant in a now-unmarked grave. The earliest marked grave here, dated 1860, is that of Martha Day, a daughter-in-law of Beasley Pruett. Other early Liberty County settlers and Pruett family descendants buried here include Reason Green (1800-1868), who held several 19th-century public offices; surnames of other prominent citizens buried here include Brashear and Linney. Veterans of four wars and the Korean Conflict are interred here. In 1946, landowners W. T. Jamison, Sr. (1878-1962) and J. N. Coleman (1882-1948) formally set aside these two acres of the French Cemetery as part of the sale of the surrounding land. The graveyard remains an important reflection of Liberty County history. Texas Sesquicentennial 1836 - 1986

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