Porters Chapel Cemetery
Also known as Porters Prairie Chapel Cemetery
Caldwell, Burleson County, Texas, USA
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It is located approximately 11 miles northwest of Caldwell off FM908 turn left on County Road 319. Cemetery is on the right side after crossing 3 bridges.
HOOKERVILLE, TEXAS. Hookerville was on the banks of Hooker Creek on the edge of the Blackland Prairie six miles west of Caldwell in western Burleson County. Settlement in the county north of the Old San Antonio Road began in the late 1830s. During the 1850s the family of John W. Porter established an extensive plantation on a tributary of Hooker Creek; it became the nucleus of a community called Porter's Chapel. A sawmill operated on Hooker Creek during the early phases of settlement. After the Civil War the Porter's Chapel community became known as Hookerville; named, as was the nearby creek, for an early settler. A post office operated there from 1878 until 1912, after which mail was routed through Chriesman. In 1885 Hookerville reported a population of 130 and a school, a church, a gristmill, and a cotton gin. The town was bypassed by State Highway 21 and the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway. In the late 1980s the Porters Chapel and cemetery and the Liberty Church were still in the area.
It is located approximately 11 miles northwest of Caldwell off FM908 turn left on County Road 319. Cemetery is on the right side after crossing 3 bridges.
HOOKERVILLE, TEXAS. Hookerville was on the banks of Hooker Creek on the edge of the Blackland Prairie six miles west of Caldwell in western Burleson County. Settlement in the county north of the Old San Antonio Road began in the late 1830s. During the 1850s the family of John W. Porter established an extensive plantation on a tributary of Hooker Creek; it became the nucleus of a community called Porter's Chapel. A sawmill operated on Hooker Creek during the early phases of settlement. After the Civil War the Porter's Chapel community became known as Hookerville; named, as was the nearby creek, for an early settler. A post office operated there from 1878 until 1912, after which mail was routed through Chriesman. In 1885 Hookerville reported a population of 130 and a school, a church, a gristmill, and a cotton gin. The town was bypassed by State Highway 21 and the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway. In the late 1980s the Porters Chapel and cemetery and the Liberty Church were still in the area.
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Caldwell, Burleson County, Texas, USA
- Total memorials64
- Percent photographed52%
- Percent with GPS0%
Gus, Burleson County, Texas, USA
- Total memorials61
- Percent photographed2%
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Gus, Burleson County, Texas, USA
- Total memorials3
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- Added: 26 Jun 2008
- Find a Grave Cemetery ID: 2266348
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