Historical Marker Detail for 1840 Houston City Cemetery


Available Photos (click to enlarge):
no photos available

Marker Text:
On April 8, 1840, the City of Houston purchased five acres in the First Ward from brothers Henry R. And Samuel L. Allen for $750, in order to establish Houston’s first city owned cemetery. A city ordinance passed later that year divided the cemetery into four sections: (1) a "potters field" for criminals, suicides, and persons killed in duels, (2) the "negroes burying ground," (3) the "commons" for "all others not otherwise provided for," and (4) family plots "for sale to the highest bidder." Later sections were created for members of the independent order of odd fellows (I.O.O.F.) and the Masons. As the only city cemetery in use during a forty-year period, it became the final resting place of many citizens of the Republic of Texas and veterans of the Civil War. Also buried in the cemetery were many victims of Houston’s recurring yellow fever epidemics, the last of which occurred in 1867. The city discontinued use of the 1840 cemetery when a new cemetery opened on Allen Parkway ca. 1879, and thereafter only burials in existing family plots were allowed. In 1893, the City Council announced plans to move all remains to a new location and build a schoolhouse on the site. However, public outcry prompted an injunction prohibiting the action. By 1923, this cemetery was neglected and overgrown and very few grave markers were still visible. Jefferson Davis Hospital was built on the site in 1924 and the Houston Fire Department facility was added in 1968. While thousands remain buried here, the only above-ground evidence of the cemetery today is the concrete curbing surrounding the Super family plot in front of the hospital and a small confederate section inside the Fire Department facility. Historic Texas Cemetery - 2006 Marker is Property of the State of Texas
Corrections and New Research:
No data available
Marker Type:
No data available
Historical Organization:
Historic Texas Cemetery (Designation Only)
Key Time Period:
1836 - 1845 Republic of Texas
Marker Address:
1101 Girard at Elder Houston 77007
Key Map:
493 L
GPS Coordinates:
29 46.109, 95 22.075
Precinct:
02
Directions:
From downtown west on Washington Ave, turn right/north on Houston Ave, turn right on Dart St., cemetery is on right, right on Elder, corner of Elder and Girard St.
Notes:
aka Germantown/Frost Town cemetery; site of Old Jeff Davis Hospital