Waller County
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Wyatt Chapel Community
Cemetery

Historical Marker Text
This cemetery is located on land that was
originally part of Jared E. Kirby's Alta Vista Plantation. According to
oral tradition, the Kirby family set aside this land as a burial site
for their slaves, as well as slaves from nearby Liendo Plantation, owned
by Kirby's cousin, Leonard Waller Croce. The numerous unmarked graves
here are believed to date to the Antebellum period, when most slaves
would not have had the resources to erect lasting grave markers. The
cemetery continued to be used by African Americans after the Civil War
ands after Kirby's widow, Helen Marr Swearingen Kirby, deeded the
plantation to the state in 1876 for the Alta Vista College for Colored
Youth (now Prairie View A&M University). Later, the cemetery became
associated with and named for Wyatt Chapel, a nearby African American
church. The oldest marked grave is that of Mattie (Wyatt) Wells (d.
1882), the daughter of a former slave. Area religious leaders, veterans
of World Wars I and II, and former slaves and their descendants are also
buried here. Used until the 1950s, the cemetery remains a tangible
reminder of African Americans' historic presence in this area.
1992
location: 2 miles north of Prairie View on FM
1098, between Pond Creek and Cameron Rd |