Historical Markers of Texas logo

Historical Markers of Texas

Back to Sabine County

Speights-Pratt Cemetery

Milam, Sabine County

Marker Text

Rebecca Hopkins Speights (b. 1796) arrived in Sabine County in 1842 as a widow with four sons and a daughter. She owned about 250 acres including this site, which became a cemetery with her burial in 1857. Sited near the Speights’ home, the cemetery was actually on land granted to Mathew Arnold Parker, a Texas revolution veteran and first chief justice (county judge) of Sabine county. Joshua M. Hopkins Speights, buried here, was a state legislator and county judge. He and Hampton Pratt were among the first merchants in Hemphill. Of fifty-one marked graves, more than half bear the Speights surname. An unknown number of unmarked graves include Speights family slaves. The Speights-Pratt Cemetery Association manages this historic burial ground.

Marker Details

Address State Highway 87 North or From the Sabine County Corthouse in Hemphill go one block East on State 83 (Worth Street), then left or North on State Hwy 87 for 4.7 miles, then left
Location Description
Marker # 16740
Dedicated 2010
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code cemetery
Latitude, Longitude Exact Lat/Lon Unknown

Map