Fannin County
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Burns Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
Land for this cemetery was donated in 1876 by
Tennessee native William Boyd Burns (1821-1907), whose log cabin home
was located adjacent to the site. Pioneer settler of the Trenton
community, he also gave nearby property for a Union church building,
Burns Chapel, which served as an early schoolhouse for the surrounding
rural area. The cemetery was first used in 1877 for the burials of
Burns' stepson John Patton and daughter Priscilla Burns, who at 16 was a
teacher in the Orangeville Academy. Other graves include those of
pioneer area settlers and prominent leaders of Trenton. Among the Civil
War veterans interred here and early physician Dr. W. C. Holmes, who
fought at Shiloh, and John w. Connelly, a former teacher in the Indian
Territory who became a popular local preacher. For well over a century
the Burns Cemetery has served residents of the Trenton area. The
original tract has been enlarged through a donation of land and the
purchase of additional property. Still in use, the cemetery serves as a
historic reminder of the region's rich heritage and as the site of an
annual memorial service honoring the settlers who led in the area's
development.
1982
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