Oakwood Cemetery (Jefferson, Texas)

For other cemeteries with the same name, see Oakwood Cemetery.
Oakwood Cemetery

Entrance to Oakwood Cemetery

Location within Texas

Details
Established 1846
Location Jefferson, Texas
Country United States
Coordinates 32°46′00″N 94°20′55″W / 32.7667°N 94.3485°W / 32.7667; -94.3485
Number of interments 3,311
Find a Grave Oakwood Cemetery

The earliest documentation of Jefferson, Texas indicates that burials were made in a public graveyard between Camp, Houston and Cypress streets along the Big Cypress Bayou (Wetland). The Cemetery Records of Marion County, Texas, by DeWare and Payne, states, “In 1846, Allen Urquhart, the donor of a public burial tract for Jefferson, substituted a ‘larger and more beautiful site’ to which prior burials were then moved.” It is unknown how many graves at the old site were moved to present-day Oakwood.[1]

Burials apparently commenced at the new location; the oldest headstone in the cemetery standing today is that of Rev. Benjamin Foscue who died of cholera on January 1, 1850.[2] In the spring of 1858, the minutes for the City of Jefferson indicate that attention was given to further planning at the cemetery. It is not called Oakwood, and there is no indication as to when that name was given.[3]

In 1862, the Mt. Sinai Jewish Cemetery was purchased adjacent to the city cemetery. Today it is encompassed by Oakwood’s main fence.[2]

By 1872, city records clearly show the city cemetery in the present location of Oakwood. A Catholic Section was added in 1880 by city ordinance.[2]

Sections were added over the years as needed, and in 1972, a fence was placed around the perimeter of all of the sections, giving the cemetery the definitive look that it has today.[2]

The Texas Historical Commission recognized Jefferson's Oakwood Cemetery as a Texas Historical Cemetery on November 10, 2004, designating it as cemetery MR-C011.[4]

Notable Internments

References

  1. The Cemetery Records of Marion County, Texas, by DeWare and Payne
  2. 1 2 3 4 Angels of Oakwood: Jefferson's Historic Cemetery by Mitchel Whitington
  3. Jefferson: Riverport to the Southwest by Fred Tarpley
  4. Texas Historical Commission website, http://www.thc.state.tx.us/


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