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Home Texas Smith County Tyler Oakwood Cemetery
     

Oakwood Cemetery

  Texas Historical Markers
Oakwood at N. Palace St., Tyler, TX, USA

Latitude & Longitude: 32° 21' 12.97662999984", -95° 18' 32.53227000012"
 
    Texas State
Historical Marker
     Originally called Lollar's Cemetery and later City Cemetery, this burial ground was located on land purchased by John Lollar in 1846. Five acres were reserved for cemetery use when Lollar sold his land to John Madison Patterson in 1849. Burials began in the 1840s, but many early gravestones have been lost. The oldest marked grave is that of four-year-old P. M. Scott, who died in 1852. The graves of numerous Confederate soldiers, who died in the Civil War (1861-1865), are situated in a raised section east of Central Drive. In another separate portion is the Jewish Beth-el Cemetery, where the oldest grave is that of 19-year-old Rachel Wolinsky, who died in 1884. In 1903, additional land was acquired and the cemetery renamed Oakwood. City officials hired William A. Woldert (1885-1937) to map the grounds, locate old graves, and lay out more walkways. Further improvements were made by WPA labor in the 1930s, when Oakwood was again enlarged. By the 1970s, the burial ground contained 19.5 acres with over 2,000 marked graves. Many of Tyler's most prominent citizens are buried here, including Judge Stockton P. Donley (1821-1871), Texas Supreme Court Justice; and Governor Richard B. Hubbard (1832-1901), who also served as U. S. Ambassador to Japan.

This page last updated: 7/15/2008

Oakwood Cemetery Historical Marker Location Map, Tyler, 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 Smith County Cemeteries:
Bascom Cemetery
Bethesda Presbyterian Church and Cemetery
Hubbard Family Cemetery
Shamburger Cemetery
Troup City Cemetery
Union Chapel Cemetery and Church
Wood-Verner Cemetery
Flewellen-Thweatt Cemetery
Hawthorne Cemetery