Dickens County
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Dickens Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
The only cemetery to serve the town of
Dickens. This graveyard began in 1891, the same year the town was
founded. Mrs. C. F. Jones, wife of pioneer settler and town barber C. F.
Jones, died in 1891 and was buried by her husband at the foot of a hill
overlooking the Croton Breaks. The owner of the property, M. S. Crow, at
the suggestion of his attorney, W. C. Ballard, donated five acres of
land surrounding the grave site for a community cemetery. W. C. Ballard,
considered by many to be the "Father of Dickens," died in 1913
and was buried here, as well. Many early settlers, city and county
officials are interred in this graveyard. Also buried here are veterans
of the Civil War, the Spanish-American War, World War I, World War II,
the Korean War, and the Vietnam War. Through the years, the site of the
Dickens Cemetery has increased through additional land donations. A
fence was erected in 1919, and in 1948 local citizens formed a cemetery
association to care for the grounds and monuments. Now, encompassing
more than eighteen acres, the cemetery serves as a reflection of area
history.
1994
location: From Dickens, take S.H. 114/U.S. 82
east, about .5 miles |