Waller County
|
Union Army P.O.W.
Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
Several Confederate military facilities were
positioned near Hempsted (2.5 mi. w), an important railroad junction,
during the Civil War. Camp Groce (then about 6 mi. e) was a
prisoner-of-war stockade established on the plantation of Leonard Waller
Groce (1806-1873). Union Army prisoners who died at various camps were
buried hear this site on the McDade Plantation, adjacent to the McDade
family cemetery (about 25 yds. NE). The cemeteries were near a narrow
gauge spur off the "Austin Branch" of the Houston & Texas
Central Railroad, built from Houston in 1858. A yellow fever epidemic in
1864 resulted in many deaths at Camp Groce and other camps, chronicled
by Aaron T. Sutton (1841-1927). a Union prisoner in Company B, 83rd Ohio
Volunteer Infantry. Sutton noted in his journal the presence of more
than 100 fresh graves here soon after his arrival at Camp Groce in 1864.
Sutton later escaped from the stockade and made his way to Beaumont (115
mi. E) on foot. Crude crosses made of cedar limbs marked the prisoners'
graves through the early 1900s, according to local residents. But the
stream-fed woodland was cleared in the 1940s for pasture land, and all
surface evidence of the cemetery was lost.
1986
location: Austin Branch Road 2.5 miles west of
its intersection with 25th Street, Hempstead |