Details for Oak Cliff Cemetery

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5113006801

Data

Marker Number 6801
Atlas Number 5113006801
Marker Title Oak Cliff Cemetery
Index Entry Oak Cliff Cemetery
Address
City Dallas
County Dallas
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 705597
UTM Northing 3625812
Subject Codes cemetery
Marker Year 1985
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 1300 Blk. of E. 8th
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Kentucky native William S. Beaty came to Texas during its early days as a Republic and received a grant of 640 acres of land. He and his brother, Josiah, who arrived in 1836, settled along the Trinity River in what is now Dallas County. The settlement that developed around their property first was called Hord's Ridge and became known as Oak Cliff in 1887. In 1846, William Beaty deeded 10 acres of his land for a public burial ground and indicated in the deed that his brother, Josiah, already had been interred on the site. The deed also specified that the cemetery should be subject to no one sect but should forever remain open to all. The oldest marked grave in the cemetery, that of Martha A. Wright, is dated 1844. Many prominent Dallas County pioneers and citizens have been buried here, including Judge William Hord, for whom Hord's Ridge was named. Two former Dallas mayors, George Sergeant and George Sprague, and a son of Gen. Sam Houston, Col. William Rogers Houston, are buried here. Oak Cliff Cemetery remains a valuable and historic link to the early settlement of Dallas.

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