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Home Texas Young County Graham Markley Cemetery Decoration Day
     

Markley Cemetery Decoration Day

  Texas Historical Markers
SH 16, 20 Mile N of Graham, Graham, TX, USA

Latitude & Longitude: 33° 21' 59.95343999988", -98° 26' 41.59775000004"
 
    Texas State
Historical Marker
    Cemetery was begun in 1881, with interment of M. C. Norfleet, adjacent to the old Plum Grove School. By 1890, the burial ground had fallen to neglect. A group of men from the surrounding rural community, including J. C. Calvin, J. W. Cox, R. E. Currie, S. G. Dean, Nelson Owen, M. A. Stewart, Andy and Ike Tinney, J. M. Wallace, and W. M. Watson, organized an annual Graveyard Working Day, to be held on the first Saturday in May. In the early years, people came by wagon and horseback, some camping overnight. After the cleaning work had been completed bouquets of wildflowers were replaced on the graves. About 1900, the settlement was named Markley, in honor of A. C. Markley, an area landowner who had served in the frontier army during the Indian wars. In 1925, the observation was changed to the first Sunday in May. Although a perpetual care program has been initiated, decoration ceremonies have persisted as an annual social event, preserving a heritage of community cohesiveness and participation. Among the grave decorated each year are those of thirteen Confederate veterans of the Civil War: John F. Bussey, J. C. Butler, Jessie Byrd, R. E. Currie, George J. Lucas, J. D. Mankins, J. L. McDaniel, J. L. Norfleet, Nelson Owen, J.C. Stanley, James Stinnett, Cates Thompson, and David White.

This page last updated: 7/15/2008

Markley Cemetery Decoration Day Historical Marker Location Map, Graham, Texas

 
   
Related Themes: Texas C.S.A., Texas Confederate States of America, Confederacy, Texas Cemetery Markers, Cemeteries, Texan Graveyards,
Burial Grounds and Graves

 
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See other Young County Cemeteries:
Carlton-Johnson-Proffitt Grave
Common Grave
Gooseneck Cemetery
Proffitt Cemetery
Farmer Cemetery