Details for Montague Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5337003436

Data

Marker Number 3436
Atlas Number 5337003436
Marker Title Montague Cemetery
Index Entry Montague Cemetery
Address SH 175, N side of Montague
City Montague
County Montague
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 618773
UTM Northing 3726124
Subject Codes cemetery; pioneers
Marker Year 1985
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location One block east of SH 175, north side of town, Montague.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The first known settlers in Montague County arrived in 1849. After the county was formed in 1857, the City of Montague was created a year later to serve as county seat. The town grew slowly at first, but by 1871 was developing rapidly and experiencing an influx of new settlers. James M. Gibbons, one of the early pioneers, came to this area from Tennessee. Family history indicates that Gibbons donated the first plot of land in this cemetery for the burial of his wife, Elizabeth Lankford Gibbons, upon her death in 1862. He later married Nancy Elizabeth Furr, who also is buried here. Gibbons died in 1899 and is interred in the cemetery, as are several other family members and numerous other early settlers. The Montague Cemetery contains both unmarked and marked graves. About 60 of the legible tombstones bear dates from the 1800s. Several Confederate veterans and a few early Texas Rangers also are buried here. With ties to the early settlement of Montague, this graveyard is an important part of the area's history. Care for the burial sites is provided by the Montague Cemetery Association. (1985)

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