Elkins Cemetery
Brownwood
vicinity, Brown County, Texas
Cemeteries of
Texas Coordiantor: Dolores I. Bishop
Information
provided by the State of Texas Atlas Site
Location from Brownwood
take FM 2524 to CR 267. Follow CR 267 about 10 miles southeast; turn onto CR
264, and continue .2 miles to cemetery
Marker:
This cemetery traces its origin to 1876,
when noted pioneer minister Noah T. Byars helped establish Live Oak Baptist
Church. That year, Civil War veteran Silas H. Wood moved his extended family
from Mississippi and settled on land which included this site. The first
recorded burial was that of D.O. Melton in 1876. Wood donated about three acres
including the graveyard to Live Oak Baptist Church in 1884. Known earlier as
Gholson, a name it shared with an area school, it later was named Elkins for the
town that developed here. The cemetery continued in use as a community graveyard
until interments ceased when the construction of Camp Bowie here during World
War II resulted in the temporary displacement of the Elkins community. Camp
Bowie was discontinued in 1947, after which a rural community developed and the
cemetery was again in use. Buried here are many of the area's pioneer families
and their descendants; veterans of World War I; and at least three Civil War
veterans, including Confederate Lieutenant Colonel Isaac A. Melton, whose
funeral in 1910 was attended by fellow Confederate Civil War veterans and
Masonic friends. The cemetery is maintained by the Elkins Cemetery Association
and continues to serve the community. (1994)