Details for Covington Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507019987

Data

Marker Number 19987
Atlas Number 5507019987
Marker Title Covington Cemetery
Index Entry Covington Cemetery
Address Cemetery Rd.
City Covington
County Hill
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 663921
UTM Northing 3561746
Subject Codes cemetery; pioneers; communities; agriculture; African American topics
Marker Year 2018
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From the intersection of State Hwy 171 and FM 67 (also Gathings Avenue), turn west and proceed through town 0.3 miles to Cemetery Road and turn north. The Covington Cemetery entrance is 0.1 mile.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text Established in the mid-1800s, the Covington Cemetery honors the memory of early Texas pioneers of Hill County and their descendants. In the early 1850s, James Jackson Gathings (1817-1880) moved from Mississippi to Texas, bringing his family, slaves, and enough livestock and essentials for creating a new life on the Blackland Prairie of north central Texas. In May of 1853, he purchased 3,136 acres on Aquilla Creek, which was the first recorded land purchase James made in Hill County. In 1854, James' younger brother, Philip Gathings (1819-1895), purchased 1,471 acres adjacent to his brother and together they developed two large plantations for agriculture and raising stock. James designated one hundred acres of this land to be laid out in lots of one to five acres for the town of Covington. He installed a steam mill, saw mill tannery, wood shop, cloth loom, and brick yards. The brothers donated 10 acres for a church and the Gathings Male and Female College, the first in Hill County. The earliest marked grave in the Covington Cemetery is for James Gathings' son-in-law, Joseph Patterson Wier (1831-1864), who was killed during the Civil War, at the Battle of Yellow Bayou in Louisiana. Joseph was initially buried near the battlefield. James had Joseph's body brought home and reinterred on the highest elevation in the cemetery. The cemetery includes 7.5 acres and almost 2,500 marked graves maintained by the Covington Cemetery Fund. In 1970, Allie Plumlee, Lucille Cowley Williams and Wileta Gathings McCall organized the townspeople to clean and restore the cemetery. A distinguishing feature of the cemetery is the native rock wall surrounding the property. Historic Texas Cemetery - 2017

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