Oakes Cemetery
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member TheMarkerFinder
N 31° 29.410 W 096° 18.164
14R E 756214 N 3487078
A marker about a historic rural cemetery in Limestone County.
Waymark Code: WM10DW2
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 04/20/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member QuesterMark
Views: 5

We were camping at Fort Parker State Park and traveling back to the park after visiting some friends in Jewett, so my wife graciously agreed to stop at a few cemeteries along the way. There was a thunderstorm the night before, so the cemetery was waterlogged. I was able to find a way to get to the marker without soaking my shoes too badly.

The rain was over on this day, but later that night, the area would experience a severe wind storm.
Marker Number: 13700

Marker Text:

This cemetery began with the burials of Mary C. Justice (d. 1861) and Roland Pair (d. 1865). It is located on land later owned by John Collins Oakes and his wife Winnie (Radford), who migrated here from Perry County, Alabama in the years following the Civil War with their family and prospered as landowners and farmers.

John Oakes died in 1876, and in 1891, Winnie formally set aside the graveyard. Since then, Oakes family descendants and others in the community have helped maintain the site, expanding it in 1950 and relocating the former Sanders Creek Church chapel from Fairoaks community to be used for funerals, meetings and other gatherings, including an annual memorial service. A non-profit corporation now provides support for the cemetery's care. Graves include those of the Bond, Justice, Little, Martin, Morton, Oakes, Reed, Turner and other longtime community families.

Early funereal customs are evidenced by the use of curbed plots and the presence of obelisks and other vertical tombstones. The hopes, faith and family ties of those interred here are reflected in the inscriptions. Still in use, Oakes Cemetery serves as an important reminder of the area's pioneer heritage.

Historic Texas Cemetery - 2004


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