New York Cemetery
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 32° 09.903 W 095° 40.055
15S E 248445 N 3561849
The cemetery on the Henderson County community of New York has served as a final resting place for the locals since 1863. It is still in use today.
Waymark Code: WMN0GJ
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 12/02/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member QuesterMark
Views: 5

The presumably majority-white New York Cemetery is memorialized with a state historic marker.

According to information we discovered on the internet, there is supposedly a separate New York Colored Cemetery, but we did not see any signs of it today.
Marker Number: 12053

Marker Text:
The New York Cemetery, established in the 1870s near the local Methodist church, grew from a tiny burial ground through the generous land donations of area settlers. The earliest marked grave is that of Enoch Tunnell (1816-1879). Twelve more graves appeared by the end of 1883, including those of many infants and young children. Mrs. Martha Dismuke gave an acre of land to the Methodist church for a public graveyard in 1883. She was the mother of Rissa Dismuke Hall, the third wife of Dr. Thomas Hunt Hall, a physician and circuit-riding Methodist minister. Their nine children were cared for by Martha Dismuke after Rissa Hall died in 1891. The Rev. James Carr Walker, who established the first New York community store and the Methodist church, sold parcels of his extensive landholdings to newly settled farmers. He and his wife, Mary Fain Walker, had ten children. Mary Walker gave half an acre for the public cemetery in 1884 following James Walker's death. Nancy E. Walker, a daughter of James and Mary Walker, and her husband John Harrison Reynolds are reported to have given an additional half acre of land to the cemetery. Horace Clinton Hall, a son of Dr. Thomas and Rissa Hall who owned the New York store for several years, and his wife Viola Beckham Hall gave more land to the growing cemetery. Dennis W. and Clara (Tindel) Sholars and Seaborn C. and Laura (Garrett) Tindel gave the southern portion of the cemetery in 1939. One of the first graves in that section was that of Clara and Calvin's father, Seaborn F. Tindel, in 1941. By the end of the 20th century, the cemetery included more than 600 graves and continued to serve as a chronicle of the New York community. (1999)


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Benchmark Blasterz visited New York Cemetery 12/24/2014 Benchmark Blasterz visited it