Freestone County
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Compton Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
William Scott Compton (1805-1882), and his
wife, Angelina Louisa Gunn Ward (1806-1880) purchased over 3000 acres
here in the settlement of Avant Prairie (later Dew) in 1852. On this
acreage the Comptons built a log home, barns and quarters for their
slaves. An attorney and banker, William served as a county judge and
state senator in Alabama before moving to Texas. This cemetery began in
1855 with the burial of the Comptons' eldest daughter, Elizabeth
Blackmon Compton Johnson. Also buried here are the Comptons' sons,
Joseph (Jodie) and Felix Richard, both Confederate veterans of the Civil
War; and their granddaughter, Martha (Mattie) Jane, and her husband
George Walton White, Texas State Legislator (1889 and 1891), Baptist
minister, and charter member of the Corinth Baptist Church in Dew,
Texas. George White's heirs formally set aside the cemetery property in
1943 and for the next 40 years the cemetery received modest care from
family members residing in the original settlement home built by William
and Angelina Compton. Descendants of the Compton and White families
formed an association in 1983 for the purpose of maintaining the
cemetery. Compton Cemetery represents a well-preserved example of a
small family cemetery.
1993
location: from US 75 & FM 489 in Dew, go
north on US 75 about .7 mi. to cemetery road, go west about .3 mi. to
cemetery |