Details for Jacobs Well Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507016275

Data

Marker Number 16275
Atlas Number 5507016275
Marker Title Jacobs Well Cemetery
Index Entry Jacobs Well Cemetery
Address
City Wimberley
County Hays
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 583995
UTM Northing 3321939
Subject Codes
Marker Year 2010
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Right side of Jacob's Well Road, 1/4 mile east of Intersection of 2325 and Jacob's Well Road
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42'
Marker Text Since 1883, Jacobs Well (Jacob’s Well) Cemetery has served as a final resting place for area residents. In 1876, three schools were organized nearby, including one for the Jacob’s Well community, named for a natural spring in Cypress Creek. The school building housed grades first through eighth and also hosted the community church. Many of the settlement’s pioneers came from South Carolina. After the school closed down, students started attending class in Wimberley. The earliest burial here is of pioneer Moses Bond Egger (d. 1883). James Hardy Monroe Spillar, who owned this property, donated land for use as a burial ground after Egger’s death. Other notable burials include Texas Ranger Foster Massey, Texas Ranger Elisha McCuistion, and Hays County sheriff Alton Lee Smithey. The interred also include ranchers, teachers, ministers, blacksmiths, store owners, housewives and veterans of conflicts dating to the Civil War. Entire families who died from epidemics are also interred here. The cemetery features vertical stones, wooden gravestones, interior fencing and a number of unmarked or unidentified graves. Around 1950, descendants of the Jacobs Well and Wimberley cemeteries began to work together to maintain the burial grounds. In 1980, the Jacobs Well families separated and formed a cemetery association, which continues to care for this burial ground. Today, Jacobs Well Cemetery continues to chronicle the history and legacy of the early area settlers.

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