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Carson Cemetery

Ector, Fannin County

Marker Text

According to local oral tradition, this cemetery was named for John Carson, who once owned the adjacent land. Some sources say one grave was in existence before 1842; others maintain the first graves date to an 1842 Indian raid at the nearby home of Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Hunter. The three victims of the raid were Mrs. Minerva Hunter, her young daughter Elizabeth, and an African American maid whose name is unknown. By 1878, the cemetery trustees acquired title to the land and they later added more acreage. Among those buried here are land donors Mr. & Mrs. W. E. Alderson, Mr. & Mrs. W. R. Luton, and T. M. Newell. Minerva Hunter's grave was marked in 1942, a century after her death. (1974, 1998)

Marker Details

Address CR 1274
Location Description from Ector take FM 898 north approx. 2.5 miles to R.O.W.
Marker # 8854
Dedicated 1974
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code cemetery
Latitude, Longitude 33.608098, -96.27809

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