Historical Markers of Texas logo

Historical Markers of Texas

Back to Parker County

Spring Creek Community

Weatherford, Parker County

Marker Text

Settlement of this area of Parker County began in 1854, with the arrival of the T.J. Shaw family from Tennessee. They built a log cabin on the south branch of Spring Creek and the community which built up in the area was named for the creek. As more settlers arrived, the community grew to include a number of homes and farms. Jeff W. Pittillo arrived in 1855 and he and his family eventually donated land to the community for a school, church, and cemetery. A.L. Pickard brought his family and three slave families to the Spring Creek area in 1856. Congregations of the Methodist, Baptist, and Cumberland Presbyterian churches were formed. A tabernacle (built in 1914 from a 1904 brush arbor) and a 1917 schoolhouse remain in the community. The Spring Creek Cemetery contains the graves of many area pioneers. The earliest documented burial, that of Humphrey Price, dates to 1856. Also, included among the burials are a number of unmarked graves and interments of slave families, as well as the grave of Alfred G. Cooper, veteran of the Texas Revolution and the Civil War. Descendants of many Spring Creek pioneers still reside in this vicinity. (1990)

Marker Details

Address FM 51 S of Weatherford about 8 mi.
Location Description From Weatherford, take FM 51 south about 8 miles to Spring Creek Cemetery.
Marker # 5015
Dedicated 1990
Size, Type 27" x 42"
Code cities and towns
Latitude, Longitude 32.652543, -97.777415

Map