Walker County
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Waverly Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
This cemetery is situated on the land
originally purchased in 1853 by Mary M. Lewis, James E. Scott, Laura A.
Scott, and Milly D. Scott. The first recorded burial was that of John
Andrew Jackson (1822-1855), a pioneer settler of Waverly. Three
gravestones dated 1852 indicate reinterments rather than earlier
burials. Hamlin F. Lewis, John Elliot Scott, and Robert Lindsey Scott
left Alabama for Texas but fell victim to cholera in 1852 and were
buried along the way. Relatives of the men had their remains placed in
this site in 1859. In 1857 Waverly Institute purchased 200 acres of land
which included the burial ground. Through the efforts of Henry M. Elmore
(1816-1879), President of Waverly Institute Board of Trustees, twelve
acres were officially set aside for cemetery use in 1873. The town of
Waverly was a cultural, educational, and religious center before the
Civil War. When New Waverly was founded on the railroad in the 1880s,
Waverly declined, but its cemetery remains in use. The burial ground has
always been associated with the pioneer settlers of Waverly. In 1965
descendants of the settlers formed a cemetery association to maintain
the site.
Location:
From New Waverly take SH 150 E approx. 8 miles
to Old Waverly Rd.; then N on Old Waverly Rd. approx. .3 miles to
Browder Loop Road, then NW on Browder Loop approx. .5 miles to (T) in
the road; then W at the T approx. 1 mile to cemetery. |