Collingsworth County
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Quail Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
Among the earliest settlers of this area were
J.E. & Mary Jane Blevins and their children. Arriving in 1902, they
were soon involved in the organization of a community school, post
office, and church. J.E. & Mary Jane Blevins donated land for each
of those endeavors, as well as for a community cemetery. The Quail
Cemetery was created in 1904, shortly after the death of the Blevins'
infant son. The grieving parents donated land for a cemetery, and their
son was the first to be buried here. There was no fence around the
burial ground. Townspeople chose grave sites in which to bury members of
their families. Though most graves are marked, some have plain stones,
and the cemetery does contain some unmarked graves. Many of the burials
are those of infants and young children, a testament to the hardships of
life and rudimentary medical care in early Collingsworth County. Area
pioneers buried in the Quail Cemetery include: J.E. Blevins (1860-1956),
Mary Jane Blevins (1868-1926), Lydia Rose Atkinson (d. 1908), W.M.
Barton (d. 1932), Lee Jeffres (d. 1932), W.I. Atkinson (d. 1940), J.A.
White (d. 1915).
Texas Sesquicentennial 1836-1986
location: From Wellington, take S.H. 1056 west
about 11 miles; then F.M. 1547 north to marker, about 3.5 miles to
cemetery.
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