Hunt/Fowler Cemetery - Lyon County, Ks.
Posted by: iconions
N 38° 23.436 W 096° 06.571
14S E 752449 N 4253110
The Hunt/Fowler Cemetery is located near the intersection of Road P on Road 160 near Emporia, Kansas in rural Lyon County. This cemetery has approximately 250 gravesites.
Waymark Code: WM6Z47
Location: Kansas, United States
Date Posted: 08/08/2009
Views: 3
From the Flint Hills Genealogical Society Website:
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The names of FOWLER and HUNT spell early settlers in the Cottonwood Valley, together with the names of WILHITE, WHILHELM, AMES, GUNKLE, and BRENDEL.
John FOWLER came to the Cottonwood Community in 1855, with his wonderful family from North Carolina and Indiana. The story of a "White Slave", by W. T. DUNGAN published in 1906 tells the story of John, his wife Milly GLASS, and the fifteen children all of whom grew to adulthood. Their names were: Sally, Frankie, Ann, Harvey, Elvis, William, Malinda, Levi, Jane, Darris, Eli, Nancy, Ironton, Ruffin, Allison, and Lethia.
There were other important settlers, just to name a two that still have many descendants still living in the Lyon County area are: T. L. WHILHELM with a family of eight children came for Ohio, and Fredrick BRENDEL who was the grandfather of Lyon County, Kansas' historian, Laura FRENCH.
Joel HUNT, for whom the first one-acre cemetery was named, was a farmer. Jesse HUNT was his son, and William was the son of Jesse. The widow of William is a daughter of Harvey FOWLER. It was later that Harvey, Ruffin and Eli FOWLER purchased the two acres adjoining the HUNT acre.
One of the earliest tombstones is that of Mary, Daughter of G.W. SMITH, who died at the age of 2 years and 6 months, April 1861.
The cemetery is well kept, and still in use today.