Details for Nuecestown Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5355003624

Data

Marker Number 3624
Atlas Number 5355003624
Marker Title Nuecestown Cemetery
Index Entry Nuecestown Cemetery
Address 11408 Leopard St. (SH 9)
City Corpus Christi
County Nueces
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 639186
UTM Northing 3080852
Subject Codes cemetery
Marker Year 1980
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 11408 Leopard Street (SH9), Corpus Christi
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text This burial ground served the original residents of the Nuecestown community. The settlement was established in 1852 by Col. Henry Lawrence Kinney (b. 1814) who owned a trading post at Corpus Christi, 13.5 miles southeast. Originally called "The Motts" because of a grove of large trees, it was later named for the nearby Nueces River. Land was deeded to the settlers by the H.L. Kinney Estate for use as a public cemetery. The earliest known grave is that of Elizabeth Beynon who died in Nuecestown on December 4, 1854, at the age of four. Her parents Benjamin and Elizabeth B. Beynon died the following year and are also buried here. Two citizens interred at this site, William Ball (1831-1897) and George Frank (1834-1904), were kidnapped by bandits in an 1875 raid on the community. Both men managed to escape their captors and returned to Nuecestown. Other graves include those of six confederate veterans of the civil war, one world War I veteran, and one victim of the 1919 hurricane. Nuecestown was once the site of a Stagecoach Inn, public ferry, meat packing plant, cotton gin, post office, school, general store, churches, and blacksmith shop, but only the cemetery remains.

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