This Cemetery was established
before 1847, the year it was
Nov. 18, 1886 - April 5, 1887
Jan. 12, 1902 - Sept. 5, 1902
Mother, Anna Becker
Feb. 5. 1860 - Sept. 14, 1939
Father, Matthew W. Becker
Jan. 15, 1855 - June 8, 1937
This old Cemetery has swaths of tall grass. Some areas have piles of tree branches.
its column is written in German:
W. P. Russell
A secluded section of the Cemetery...
The Eldridge Family Plot
Dec. 21. 1824 - Aug. 3, 1891
I found a Headstone with the Masonic Symbol...
Born in Girard, PA.
April 16, 1838
Died Oct. 6, 1867
Head Stones with photos...
Died Feb. 20, 1895, Age 87 years
Died March 25, 1908, Age 68 years
This Cemetery has two unmarked Mass Graves. In 1867, Brenhan, and other nearby communities lost many of its citizens to the Yellow Fever Epidemic.
In memory of Lydia
Stockade fencing separates homes in the adjacent housing development on three sides of Brenham Masonic Cemetery.
Aug. 20, 1817 - Oct. 7, 1867
Geo. W. Barnett
Mar. 27, 1845 - Oct. 14, 1867
April 28, 1823 - Jan. 9, 1892
Oct. 31, 1859 - June 1860
Mar. 1797 - Mar. 14, 1869
Oct. 6, 1867, Age 56 yrs. & 27 days
Susan E. Key
Sept. 18, 1868, Age 37 yrs. & 21 days
Sept. 5, 1851 - Jan. 26, 1860
Oct. 30, 1857 - July 22, 1911
The sandals I'm wearing leave lots of exposed skin for prickly Burs to grab onto. They hurt my feet and I take the last of my photos with my camera's long lens.
November 30, 1851
aged 28 years, 9 mos, 9 days
A secluded section of the Cemetery...
The Obelisk: C.B. Shepard
Oct. 15, 1812 - Dec. 31, 1892
M.J. Andrews Shepard
Died May 3, 1892
Judge James E. Shepard
April 24, 1817 - July 16, 1894
I decided not to go any closer to this grouping of graves.
The specks in the middle of the photo are Ants moving back
& forth from the underground Nest.
Col. 28 Ky. Infantry
War of 1812
Mar. 7, 1776 - Oct. 6, 1853
is overgrown.
Brenham Masonic Cemetery is an important historic site. Families buried their parents, babies, children, wives, and husbands here.
Hundreds lie in unmarked graves because of the swift-moving, too often fatal Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1867. The lack of monuments and plaques to memorialize them does not make their lives less important to their families or less important to the community.
No comments:
Post a Comment