Collin County
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Elm Grove Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
Members of the pioneer Roland family, natives
of Alabama, settled here in the 1830s. Land at this site was part of a
Republic of Texas Land Grant awarded to family members in recognition of
the military service of John Roland, who was killed during the Texas
Revolution. Receiving the property were his mother, Martha Roland
Arrington, and two brothers Sherrod and Ezekial Roland. A veteran of the
Texas Revolution, Ezekial (b. 1824) and his wife Mahala (Pace) set aside
this part of the land grant for use as a public cemetery. The first burial
here was that of the donor, Ezekial Roland, who died at the age of 35,
in 1859. The pioneer Elm Grove Cemetery also served the earliest
residents of the seven points community, later known as Westminster.
Established in the 1860s, The town was the site of an early Methodist
School, Westminster College, which operated here until the early 1900s,
and a later Baptist Academy. Still in use, Elm Grove Cemetery contains
over 1500 known graves and 250 unidentified gravesites. For over 100
years it was served as the burial site of pioneers, community leaders,
and residents of the surrounding rural area.
1981
location: from Westminster, take FM 2862 W
about 1 7/10 mi to CR 480, go north to cemetery about 2/10 mi. |