Bethel Cemetery
Bethel Cemetery
Bethel, Anderson
County, Texas
Cemeteries of
Texas Coordinator: Dolores I. Bishop
Location about 20
mi. NW of Palestine on US 287, in Bethel on CR 2602
Marker:
Originally part of a Mexican land grant
awarded to Jose de Jesus Grande in 1828, land at this site was later granted to
early area settler Henry Rampy. Rampy, who had come to this part of Texas in
1848, deeded 5 acres of his land in 1859 for a community cemetery and church.
The earliest significant settlement of pioneers in the Bethel area came in 1846.
By 1852, the community was thriving and a post office was established. The
Bethel Cemetery was used largely by residents of the town and by settlers in
other parts of Anderson and Henderson counties. The earliest marked grave, that
of M. B. Hodge, is dated 1862. Her husband, the Rev. Robert Hodge, who also is
buried here, was a pioneer Cumberland Presbyterian minister. He was instrumental
in the founding of the Science Hill academy, an important early educational
institution in this part of the state. Other early settlers and their
descendants are buried here, as are a number of Confederate veterans. The Bethel
community began to decline after the end of the Civil War and was largely gone
by the time the post office was discontinued in 1914. This cemetery is the only
significant remnant of the once-thriving Anderson County community. (1985)