Erath County
|
Pecan Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
The Pecan Cemetery traces its history to 1880.
The oldest marked grave is that of Horace F. Adams (October 19-November
14, 1880), son of Isaac (1842-1931) and Mary (1855-1915) Adams, who are
also buried in the historic graveyard. A memorial marker for Civil War
casualty Daniel Turney (1829-1864) bears the earliest death date,
although he is actually buried in Tyler. His family placed the memorial
at his wife's grave site in the 1960s. The cemetery contains a number of
19th-century graves. It was the primary burial ground for residents of
the Purves Community, which grew up around a blacksmith shop owned by
James Purves. Friendship Baptist Church, located near the cemetery,
served the community from 1884 until it disbanded in 1915. The building
was torn down in 1922 and the material was used to build a tabernacle at
Pecan Cemetery. Funerals were held in the tabernacle, and on annual
special days families gathered there for refreshment while working in
the cemetery. The Pecan Cemetery Endowment Corporation was formed in
1961 to provide perpetual care for the graveyard.
1992
location: from Dublin, take FM 219 south east
about 8 miles |