Collin County
|
Bradley Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
Edward Bradley, his wife Nancy, and their
family came to this area from Kentucky in the 1840s as members of the
Peters Colony. They built a log home of a branch of Wilson's Creek in
the Southwest part of present McKinney. A hillside near the Bradley home
became the site of a family Graveyard. The Original Cemetery covered
about an acre of land. Though begun as a family cemetery, other members
of the small Community were eventually interred here. Eleven original
headstone remain in the Cemetery. There are believed to be a number of
unmarked graves, as well. South of this plot a slave cemetery was
located in a wooded area, the graves marked with Bois d'Arc Wood Markers.
The oldest documented grave is that of Edward Bradley (1787-1855). Nancy
Bradley (d.1880), and their son and daughter-in-law, Thomas T. (d.1881)
and Sarah J. (d.1876) Bradley, are also buried here. Others interred in
the Cemetery include Dr. David Maclay (d.1859), six-month-old William B.
Pulliam (d.1863), and Susan R. Parrish and her child, who died within
months of each other in 1861. The Historic Bradley Cemetery serves as a
reminder to Collin County residents of their area's heritage. Texas
Sesquicentennial 1836-1986
1986
location: 300 Blk. of Wilson Creek Parkway
(near Corner of Steeple Ridge and Wilson Creek Pkwy), McKinney |