Historical Markers StoppingPoints.com Historical Markers, Sightseeing & Points of Interest Scenic Roads & Points of Interest
About Us | Photo Gallery | Free Widgets | Featured States | Search Site
Register or Edit LoginRegister
Home Texas Harris County Houston Harrisburg-Jackson Cemetery
     

Harrisburg-Jackson Cemetery

  Texas Historical Markers
7700 Bowie St., Houston, TX, USA
 
    Texas State
Historical Marker
     The earliest origins of this cemetery are undocumented. African American burials likely began with development of the local cattle industry and area railroads during the 1840s and 1850s. By the 1870s an African American community was well established in Harrisburg. About that time, former slaves began to establish their own fraternal organizations. The Mutual Benevolent Association was chartered in 1878. As a service to its members, the association arranged and sometimes financed burial services on this site, located between Harrisburg and what apparently was a proposed freedman's town which never materialized. Ownership of the land changed several times in the ensuing years, and a benevolent organization called Loving Band of Hope acquired the property in 1899, caring for the cemetery for 23 years. In 1922, the Jackson Funeral Home, among the oldest African American funeral homes in Houston, bought the cemetery property and used it as its primary burial ground until the last recorded burial in 1967. Among the graves is that of Tom Blue, once a body servant of . Blue reported that he was present at the Battle of San Jacinto. He served Houston until escaping to Mexico before the Emancipation Proclamation and later returned to live out his long life in Harrisburg. Also buried here are Steve Ray, a rodeo rider and cowboy on the Samuel Allen Ranch in Pasadena; black civic leader George W. Sanders; Wilson Burley, who fought in the Civil War in the 84th U.S. Colored Infantry; Austin C. Winfree, a buffalo soldier who served in Cuba during the Spanish American War; and veterans of World War I. The cemetery is a chronicle of the African American slaves, former slaves and pioneers of Harrisburg and of Texas.

This page last updated: 7/15/2008


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

 
Explore other historical .
 View other
 

See other Harris County Cemeteries:
Alief Cemetery
Gravesite of John Kirby Allen
Bear Creek Methodist Church and Cemetery
Crown Hill Cemetery
Evergreen Cemetery
Glendale Cemetery
Humble Cemetery
Morgan's Point Cemetery
Trinity Lutheran Church Cemetery
Washington Cemetery
White Cemetery
Roberts Cemetery
McDougle Cemetery
Spring Cemetery
Pillot Cemetery
St. John Lutheran Cemetery
College Memorial Park Cemetery
Magnolia Cemetery
Perry Cemetery
Strack Cemetery