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Hutto Cemetery

Hutto, Williamson County

Marker Text

T.A. Boatright buried a family child and her husband, E.B., here in the late 1880s when the site was known as Elmwood Cemetery. In 1889, she bought land here from C.P. and Julia Crews. Several graves already existed in addition to those of her family, and many were unmarked. Today, the earliest marked grave is that of Joseph Metcalfe (d. 1887). Over time, the property exchanged hands from the Boatrights to the Haygoods. Birdie Haygood Badger sold the property in 1950 to the newly formed Hutto Cemetery Association, and the cemetery name changed to reflect its association to the community. Records indicate that within the cemetery's bounds are two lots once reserved for paupers, as well as one lot associated with the Swedish church that evolved into Hutto's First Methodist Church. The community's history is evident in the cemetery, with text on grave markers signifying settlers who came from other states or countries, area residents who belonged to fraternal organizations or who served in the military as early as the Civil War, and children whose brief lives also contributed to the local history. Historic Texas Cemetery - 2004

Marker Details

Address CR 135, CR 137
Location Description 1 mi. S of US 79 on FM 1660 at intersection of CR 135 and CR 137
Marker # 13477
Dedicated 2004
Size, Type HTC Medallion and 24" x 16" interpretive plaque
Code cemetery
Latitude, Longitude 30.521149, -97.546247

Map