Details for Long Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507013432

Data

Marker Number 13432
Atlas Number 5507013432
Marker Title Long Cemetery
Index Entry Long Cemetery
Address CR 4120, CR 1126
City Cumby
County Hopkins
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 235482
UTM Northing 3664229
Subject Codes cemetery
Marker Year 2005
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 3 mi. S of Cumby via FM 275; W on CR 4120, S on CR 1126
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 16" x 24"
Marker Text Texas Rangers in the late 1830s camped on a hill west of present Cumby in a grove of black jack oak trees. Settlers established a community near them for protection and called the settlement Black Jack Grove. Later renamed Cumby, it grew into a trade center during the late 19th century. In the 1850s, James M. and Mary Long settled along Turkey Creek in a small community known as Crossroads, south of Black Jack Grove. Tradition holds they set aside land c. 1860 for the burial of a girl who died when her family passed through the area. By 1865, James had rewed, to Susan Luttrell, and the grave of Mary Long may be among those that are today unmarked. The first marked grave at Long Cemetery is that of John M. Webb (d. 1869). Other early marked graves include those of Civil War veterans and Woodmen of the World members, while several burials are indicated by small concrete markers that replaced original bois d'arc posts. An association meets annually at the burial ground, which was enlarged in the 1970s. The site now serves as a reminder of generations of area settlers. Historic Texas Cemetery - 2005

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