Anderson County
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Judson Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
This graveyard traces its origin to the
establishment of Judson Missionary Baptist Church of Christ on September
20, 1854. The church served the pioneer community of Wildcat Bluff
(later called Cayuga). The congregation relocated here about 1856 from
the nearby Gilmore's Chapel and Brush Arbor to a church building and
acreage donated by Martin and Nancy Haywood on October 20, 1855. The
first recorded burial here was that of 7-year-old Allen W. Barton on
October 26, 1863. Pioneer burials were a community effort. Members
prepared the body, made the shroud, built the caskets and dug the
graves. Cedar trees and large stones were used as grave markers.
According to local tradition cedar tree stumps continue to disclose the
site of unmarked grave sites. In 1910 a small parcel of land was added
to the graveyard by donors L. J. M. Sutton, L. B. Clay, Mrs. Ida Harton,
and Joe A. and Sarah Johnson. Ellen and J. W. Seat donated 3-3/4 acres
to the Judson Baptist Church in 1925 and sold additional acreage in 1954
for cemetery purposes. The Judson Cemetery Association helped establish
a perpetual care fund in 1970 to maintain the grounds. The cemetery,
deeded to the cemetery association by the Judson Baptist Church in 1986,
continues to serve the church and community.
1993
location: south of Cayuga via US 287 2 mi.,
then 1 mi. north on CR 476 to cemetery entrance |