Details for Chireno Lower Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507016732

Data

Marker Number 16732
Atlas Number 5507016732
Marker Title Chireno Lower Cemetery
Index Entry Chireno Lower Cemetery
Address CR 446
City Chireno
County Nacogdoches
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 372044
UTM Northing 3485134
Subject Codes cemetery
Marker Year 2009
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Chireno Lower Cemetery
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Situated near El Camino Real de Los Tejas, on land granted in 1792 to Jose Antonio Chireno, the Chireno Community developed in the 1830s when Chireno’s heirs sold tracts to incoming colonists, including Samuel Flournoy and Daniel H. Vail. In 1844, Vail donated around thirty acres to the trustees of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Chireno for the community to use as a cemetery, church, and school, known as the Chireno School Campus. Out of the original thirty acres donated, a little over nine acres were designated for cemetery purposes. This land was divided into two segregated cemeteries, for anglo and african-american burials. After two structures burned at this location in 1890 and again in 1925, the church building was rebuilt to the northwest. The landscape of the cemetery is traditional with a variety of gravestones, including markers of granite, limestone, and marble surrounded by trees, grass, and irises. The earliest marked grave, that of the baby of M.W. And A.T. Burke, dates to 1861, although there may be earlier unmarked burials. Other noted burials include the reverend Richard A. Menefee (1809-1893) and Missouri M. Fowler Woolam (1807-1891), widow of Reverend Littleton Fowler and the first protestant woman missionary of Texas. Among many pioneer families buried here, the cemetery also serves as the final resting place for veterans of World War I, World War II, and the Korean War, as well as members of Woodmen of the World and Mason organizations. An oversight committee formed in 1978 to care for the cemetery, and in 2010, the Chireno Lower Cemetery, Inc. was formed to maintain this historic burial ground. Historic Texas Cemetery – 2009

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