Wood County
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Lee Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
North Carolina natives Benjamin Lee, his wife
Alice, and their family came to this area about 1853, and soon acquired
over 1,230 acres of land. The Lees operated a large cotton plantation
with the help of their ten children and slave labor. Benjamin Lee became
a community leader and was elected county commissioner one year after
his arrival in the area. Currently covering over thirteen acres, this
cemetery began as a small family burial ground in 1856, upon the death
of Benjamin Lee. Alice Lee was the second person to be buried here, and
their graves are included in the Lee family plot in the oldest section,
surrounded by an iron fence. The graves of the four Lee sons, all of
whom served in the Confederate army, are also in the family plot.
Although established as a family graveyard, the Lee Cemetery was
expanded to include graves of neighbors and gradually became a public
community cemetery. Many types of stones and grave markers can be seen
here, including one above-ground brick vault burial. Members of the
community interred here include banker Charles H. Morris; mayor and
state legislator William D. Suiter; doctor John B. Goldsmith and
newspaper publishers Homer R. and Mae O. Weir.
1986
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