Details for Zion Hill Baptist Church Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5347012110

Data

Marker Number 12110
Atlas Number 5347012110
Marker Title Zion Hill Baptist Church Cemetery
Index Entry Zion Hill Baptist Church Cemetery
Address Park St.
City Nacogdoches
County Nacogdoches
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 343921
UTM Northing 3497944
Subject Codes cemetery; African American topics; Baptist denomination; churches
Marker Year 2000
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Park St. at F. E. Abernethy Lanana Creek Trail
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The Rev. Lawson Reed came to Nacogdoches in 1878 to find no organized Baptist church serving the black community. For a time, he attended the Union Church with other Baptists as well as Presbyterians and Methodists, sometimes leading services there. The Rev. Mr. Reed prevailed upon local Baptists to organize their own church, and in 1879 they began to meet under a brush arbor. Frank and Ellen Walton, Annie K. McClain, Jim and Annie Rigsby, Harriet Moore, Hattoe Vaughns, Velma Williams McCullough and the Reeds were the charter members of the church. The approach of winter forced them to seek other accommodations, and the Waltons gave two acres of land for a building. Though the presence of the church and a number of unmarked and undated graves suggest earlier interments at this site, the earliest marked grave is that of Julia Harris, who died on February 8, 1897. Hers is the only marked grave dating from the 19th century. The Zion Hill Baptist Church grew steadily from its inception and by the 1890s the congregation required a larger structure. Early members continued to be buried on this site until the burial of Charley Blakey in 1945. Among those buried here are the Rev. Lawson Reed (d. 1924), whose grave is marked by two stones; John B. Liggins (d. 1919), Amiel Rivers (d. 1932), and Jim Smith (d. 1938), who served in World War I. There are several markers denoting members of fraternal organizations. Over time, the cemetery fell into disrepair. In the early 1970s a movement began to have the city assume custodianship of the cemetery. The burial ground remains a chronicle of the African American pioneers of Nacogdoches. (2000)

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