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Woods Chapel Cemetery

Roby vicinity, Fisher County

Marker Text

(1.5 miles southwest) Settlement of this area of Fisher County began in the early 1880s. A small frame building, erected near this site in 1883-1884, was used as a school and church. A cemetery was established and was in use by 1884. The church was named in honor of its first pastor, J. B. Woods. Among the first settlers here were Henry Clay Lyon (1815-1889) and his family. Lyon, a native of Tennessee, was a veteran of the Republic of Texas Army as well as the Confederate forces of the Civil War. Although Lyon is buried in the Woods Chapel Cemetery, a granite marker in his honor was placed in the Roby Cemetery at this site of the graves of his wife and children. Plans to reinter him next to his widow during the Texas Centennial of 1936 were never completed. The earliest marked grave in the Woods Chapel Cemetery is that of Sarah H. Lawrence (1881-1884), a granddaughter of Henry C. Lyon. Of the twenty-six marked graves here, thirteen are those of infants or small children. The graveyard also contains at least twenty-eight unmarked graves. An important part of Fisher County history, the cemetery is the site of an annual San Jacinto Day observance on April 21. (1988)

Marker Details

Address US 180
Location Description 10 miles east of Roby on US 180, just west of intersection with FM 1812/CR 283. The marker faces US 180, but the cemetery is south down FM 1812, west on CR 156, then next right on dirt road to cemetery.
Marker # 5901
Dedicated 1988
Size, Type 27" x 42"
Code cemetery
Latitude, Longitude 32.756784, -100.203267

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