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Home Texas Anderson County Tennessee Colony Jemison Quarters Cemetery
     

Jemison Quarters Cemetery

  Texas Historical Markers
CR 2054 at CR 321, Tennessee Colony, TX, USA

Latitude & Longitude: 31° 48' 42.6996", -95° 50' 48.1992"
 
    Texas State
Historical Marker
    Jemison Quarters Cemetery In 1847, settlers from Tennessee and Alabama moved to this area, naming the community Tennessee Colony. Elbert S. Jemison, believed to have come from Alabama Circa 1850, established a plantation in this vicinity. He served as a soldier during the Civil War and profited from cotton production on his plantation. There, he housed his slaves, as well as many from other states, renting their labor to area farms and operations like the nearby Confederate salt works. Following Emancipation in 1865, many freed slaves remained in Tennessee Colony, establishing a cemetery here. Tradition holds that the earliest burials are of slave owners and their slaves; the first marked grave dates to 1880. Several of the men and women buried in the cemetery had been born into slavery. Today, the burial ground, known as Jemison, Jimmison or Jimerson Quarters cemetery, is maintained by a cemetery association. It is the final resting place of generations of area African American residents, including veterans of major 20th century conflicts, and it remains a link to the history of more than a century's work toward freedom, equal rights, community and home. Historic Texas cemetery - 2003

This page last updated: 7/15/2008

Jemison Quarters Cemetery Historical Marker Location Map, Tennessee Colony, Texas

 
   
Related Themes: Texas C.S.A., Texas Confederate States of America, Confederacy, Texas Cemetery Markers, Cemeteries, Texan Graveyards,
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See other Anderson County Cemeteries:
Bell Cemetery
Bethel Cemetery
Bethel Church and Cemetery
Campbell Cemetery
Concord Baptist Church and Cemetery
Denson Springs Cemetery
Fields Chapel Methodist Church and Cemetery
Fort Houston Cemetery
Hopewell Cemetery
Judson Cemetery
Mound Prairie Cemetery
Muse Cemetery
Olive Branch Cemetery
First Gravesite of Cynthia Ann Parker
Providence Church and Cemetery
Stafford - Tucker Cemetery
Starr Cemetery
Tennessee Colony Cemetery
Magnolia Cemetery
Swanson Cemetery
Link Family Cemetery