Hart-Herrington Cemetery
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Markerman62
N 30° 27.465 W 094° 21.687
15R E 369292 N 3370296
In the edge of Big Thicket National Preserve, east of US 69 on FM 420, north of Kountze
Waymark Code: WMNMT2
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 04/05/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member QuesterMark
Views: 4

Marker Number: 11932

Marker Text:
William Henry Hart was born in Georgia in March 1804. Hampton Jackson Herrington was born in the same state in 1817. Hart married Sarah Granberry Herrington, becoming "Hamp" Herrington's brother-in-law. Herrington married Rachel Overstreet in 1838; after Rachel's death he married her sister, Elizabeth Overstreet, in 1845. The Hart and Herrington families moved to the East Texas community of Providence in 1853. In that year Hart served as a delegate from Jefferson County to select a nominee for congressman for East Texas. Hart and Herrington purchased eighty acres of the W. M. Bumstead survey in 1854. A portion of that land was to be set aside for a cemetery. When Hardin County was created in 1858, William H. Hart was elected county treasurer and his brother-in-law, "Hamp" Herrington, became the first chief justice (county judge). William Hart died in 1861 and his body was interred near this site, formally establishing the cemetery. The next burial was that of Sarah Ann Teel of Saratoga, who died in 1872. Sarah Herrington Hart was buried beside her husband in 1896. Hampton Herrington served the people of Hardin County until his own death in 1899. Of the nine marked graves in Hart-Herrington Cemetery, eight are those of relatives of William and Sarah Hart or Hampton and Elizabeth Herrington. Believed to be the second graveyard established in Hardin County, the Hart-Herrington Cemetery remains as a chronicle of the pioneers of East Texas. (1999)


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Markerman62 visited Hart-Herrington Cemetery 04/08/2015 Markerman62 visited it