Anderson County
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Stafford-Tucker Cemetery

Recorded Texas Historic
Landmark
Historical Marker Text
The family of Uriah Monroe and Elizabeth Hanks
Stafford came to Texas in the 1840s. In 1851 their son, George
Washington, married Susan Woolverton and raised his family in Anderson
County. After George W. Stafford's death in 1876 his land passed to his
three children, William Uriah, Mary Louisa, and James Monroe Stafford.
William later sold his interest to his brother and sister and left the
area. The Stafford family became important in the life of the community
of Price's Chapel, which was later renamed Springfield. Mary Louisa
married John Lewis Tucker in 1871, and in 1897 this cemetery was begun
on the family farm with the burial of their infant son, James D. Tucker.
James Monroe Stafford was the next person buried here, after he was
killed in the line of duty as Anderson County deputy sheriff in 1899.
Mary Louisa Stafford Tucker died of pneumonia in 1900 and was buried in
the family plot. Those interred in this cemetery include members of the
Stafford and Tucker families, as well as a few neighbors. The graveyard
has been cared for by members of the family since its beginning. It
serves as a physical reminder of the area's early history.
1988
Incise on base: Sponsored by James H. and
Mamie R. Stafford
location: just west of junction FM 837 and FM
2961 on FM 2961, 4 mi. west of Bradford |