Address: 2800 N Alexander Dr, Baytown, TX 77520, USA
“I had a wonderful experience today because a gentleman named Josh went above and beyond! I was so pleased to have so many different unique and beautiful pieces to choose from. I am currently looking through the catalog trying to decide what my next order will be. Everything is so beautiful it makes it’s so hard to decide what to choose. Thank you so much Josh,I really appreciate all of your help today!”
Address: 3010 Ferry Rd, Baytown, TX 77520, USA
“Great view and extremely peaceful”
Address: 3050 Bay Oaks Harbor Dr, Baytown, TX 77523, USA
Address: Bayway Dr, Baytown, TX 77520, USA
“Arthur-Hale Family Cemetery The cemetery plot, 28 by 25 feet, was conveyed by J.F. Mitchell and his wife to Thomas and Hugh Arthur in 1894. It sits on land that is now completely surrounded by the ExxonMobil Baytown Complex. Today, ExxonMobil employees maintain the cemetery and tend it's graves The oldest of the graves is that of Mary E. Wise, who died in 1853. Others buried there are Elizabeth Hale, who died in 1895, Alexander Hale-1885 (CSA), William C. Arthur-1882 (CSA), Josephine Arthur-1909, Irine Arthur-1894. Josephine was the first wife of Hugh Arthur and Irine was their daughter who died at the age of three.County records show the cemetery is still registered in the name of Hugh Arthur, who died in 1946. Hugh Arthur is not buried there. He remarried and moved to Morgans Point. List of those buried there Mary E. Wise, Died 1853 Elizabeth Hale, Died 1895 Alexander Hale, (born Oct. 1807, died Sept. 13,1885) CSA, Private under Capt. R. J. Carr, Fayette State Rights Guard, Mtd., Inf. TST, enlisted July 1,1861 William Arthur, (born Kentucky 1816, died 1882) age 66, CSA, Co. C, 20th Texas Cavalry, Bass Regt., Johnson's Battalion, 20th Texas Dismounted Cavalry, Co. F, Morgan's Regt., Co. C Texas Infantry Josephine Arthur, Died 1909 Wife of Hugh Arthur. Irine Arthur, Died 1894 Died at age three. Most of this info came from a 1981 Baytown Sun newspaper article written by Wanda Orton.”
Address: 414 S Burnett Dr, Baytown, TX 77520, USA
“Gravesite of the wife of the first President (interim) of the Republic of Texas, David G. Burnet.”
Address: Nature Center, Baytown, Baytown, TX 77520, USA
“The Wooster Family Cemetery was located at the end of Crow Road off of Mapleton Drive by Burnet Bay in Baytown. Part of the old Wooster community (town site). All thats left of Wooster is the Wooster School House in Baytown. Town of Wooster was laid out in 1892; In the late 1980's nothing was left of the cemetery. Subsidence had destroyed this cemetery. Several coffin handles have been found on the shoreline and at low tide the remains of a cement crypt could be seen. This Cemetery was part of the old Wooster community, at the end of what was Mapleton Drive in an area that later became a part of Brownwood Subdivision. 90% of Brownwood Subdivision was eventually destroyed by subsidence and the resultant flooding from Hurricanes Carla and Alicia. While some graves were relocated, not all could be and remained there. Now under water and part of the Baytown Nature Center, the cemetery was at the tip end of the peninsula with Scott's Bay on the east and Crystal Bay on the west. The tip can be reached using hiking trails that were once public streets in the subdivision. Several coffin handles have been found on the shoreline and at low tide the remains of a cement crypt could be seen at one point in time.”
Address: 861 Independence Pkwy N, Baytown, TX 77520, USA
“The Lynchburg Cemetery is one of the few remaining traces of the early town of Lynchburg, founded and named by Nathaniel Lynch, who arrived in the area in 1822 and received a Mexican land grant near the confluence of Buffalo Bayou and the San Jacinto River. The Lynchburg Cemetery, established on that land by 1834, was located outside the boundaries of Lynchburg until 1855, when the town was expanded from 40 to 71 blocks, and the one-acre cemetery became block 42, bounded by Sherman, Burleson and Hunt Streets. Travelers using Lynch’s Ferry passed the cemetery along the historic road that has served as the Eastern boundary of the cemetery since its creation. Lynchburg Cemetery is the oldest known burial ground associated with the historic community and is the resting place of many of its early residents, including pioneer settlers of the Republic and State of Texas, veterans of the Mexican War and Civil War, and their families and descendants. The oldest marked grave is that of A. B. Jones, who died in 1855. However, older burials exist, including that of Nathaniel Lynch (d. 1837) and his wife, Frances Hubert Lynch Hardin. Also buried here are some of the early Texas settlers who participated in the Runaway Scrape in April 1836, fleeing eastward ahead of the Mexican Army. Standing witness to the battle of San Jacinto, numerous hurricanes, and daily passing ferry riders, Lynchburg Cemetery persists as a silent reminder of an early Texas community, and serves as a record of this area’s settlers, shop keepers, tinsmiths, laborers, seamen, ship captains, judges, doctors, farmers and other citizens who came to a new land seeking opportunity.”
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