Montague County
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Molsbee Chapel Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
The Rev. Abraham Molsbee and his wife Susan
Looney Molsbee brought their eight children to Texas from Tennessee in
1888. They purchased 965 acres of land for farming and stock raising. A
minister in the Church of the Brethren denomination, Molsbee and Henry
Brubaker established a church in Nocona in April 1889. Molsbee also was
instrumental in the organization of a number of other congregations
throughout northwest Texas. He did mission work in the communities of
Williams Creek in Cooke County, Live Oak in Parker County, Lingleville
in Erath County, Pampa in Gray County and Salt Creek in Montague County,
as well as in the Indian Territory (later Oklahoma). This cemetery,
located adjacent to the Molsbee Chapel Church, began as a family
graveyard when the Molsbees' 20-year-old son, Orville, died in 1888.
Other marked 19th century graves are those of the Molsbees' son Robert,
who died at age two in 1895 and a neighbor, Wilfred Beck, who died in
1898. Though the graveyard was used by the community at large, it
legally was a private cemetery until 1942, when David C. Molsbee, who
inherited the land including this site from his parents Abraham and
Susan, deeded two acres for a community burial ground. A cemetery
association was established in 1971. Many veterans of the Armed Forces
are interred here, among them Confederate soldiers John P. Watson of the
43rd Georgia Regiment and Fulton B. Loe, Jr., of Company A28, Louisiana
Infantry. Other veterans include participants in World War I, World War
II and the Vietnam conflict. The burial ground continues to serve the
area and is a chronicle of northwest Texas history.
2000
location: 2 mi. NW of Nocona on Fm 1759; 3 mi.
N on Fm 3394 (Molsbee Chapel Road)
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