Historical Markers of Texas logo

Historical Markers of Texas

Back to Chambers County

Wallisville Cemetery

Wallisville, Chambers County

Marker Text

Early settler Albert Gallatin Van Pradelles (1808-1884) set aside land at this site for the burial of his grandson, William M. "Willie" Chambers, who died on his third birthday on December 10, 1878. the land surrounding the grave was established as a legal cemetery in county deed records the following month. Field notes by county surveyor Daniel B. Wallis along with other deed work set up a total of sixteen family lots in January 1879. Several locally prominent families were among those who purchased the original sixteen plots, including the van Pradelles, Chambers, Gordon, Wooten, Sisson, Mayes, and LaFour families. In 1884 a. G. van Pradelles became the fourth known burial in the cemetery he established. Among the stately monuments and shade trees can be found the tombstones of numerous elected county officials and pioneer settlers. The Wallisville Cemetery has been expanded several times since Van Pradelles laid out the site in 1879. The cemetery land remained in the van Pradelles family for over 100 years until 1986, when a descendant entrusted it to the Wallisville Cemetery Association for care and administration.

Marker Details

Address
Location Description on Wallisville-Turtle Bayou Rd., 1 mi. east of Old Wallisville
Marker # 9139
Dedicated 1991
Size, Type 27" x 42"
Code cemetery
Latitude, Longitude 29.82868, -94.725537

Map