T.C. Shenall - Rosewood Cemetery, Galveston, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
N 29° 16.053 W 094° 49.770
15R E 322252 N 3239016
With only a few headstones remaining in Rosewood Cemetery, this marker is in excellent condition.
Waymark Code: WMT1YE
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 09/11/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Manville Possum
Views: 0

A hand etched marker for:


T.C. Shenall
Died
Oct 1926

Find a Grave lists T.C. Shenall as Thomas Charles Sheinall.
Edit submitted to F-A-G. (9/25/2016)
(visit link)

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Approximately 411 graves are listed in records as being located at Rosewood. Today, markers exist for only around 20.
The cemetery was part of an eight-acre parcel of land at Seawall between 61st and 63rd streets that Saracco purchased in the early 1980s. Since then, a Comfort Inn, Super 8 Motel, Waffle House and Beachcomber Inn have been built on the property that surrounds the cemetery. The cemetery sits directly behind the Comfort Inn off 63rd.

Source: (visit link)


The Texas Historical Marker here reads:

On January 30, 1911, a group of African American Galvestonians formed the Rosewood Cemetery Association. The citizens purchased more than eight acres from the Joe Levy Family near the beach, just west of the termination of Seawall Boulevard. Prior to the establishment of Rosewood Cemetery, African American citizens were prevented from interring their dead at most of the city's cemeteries.

Individuals, churches and organizations, such as the Norris Wright Cuney Lodge No. 63 of the Colored Knights of Pythias, purchased shares in the association. Association minutes indicate that individual plots were sold for $10 each, with an additional $2 grave digging charge; plots for the burial of children cost $6.50. The first interment was that of Robert Bailey, an infant who died on February 1, 1912. The cemetery was utilized into the 1940's, although most of the identified burials date from 1914 and 1915. The last known burial occurred in June 1944, when Frank Boyer was interred.

In 1951, the city of Galveston began acquiring undeveloped portions of the cemetery for the extension of the Seawall west of 61st St. This construction blocked the natural outlet of Green's Bayou and created flooding in the cemetery and may have contributed to a reduction in its use. Beginning in the late 1950's, the land on which the cemetery sat was gradually sold to developers, and by the late 1990's, Rosewood had disappeared from many city maps. In 2006, just over one acre of the original cemetery property was donated to the Galveston Historical Foundation, in an effort to preserve what was left of this important site.
Date of Death: 1926

Material: Concrete

Date of Birth: Not listed

Web Site: Not listed

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