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Tag: dallas pioneers

Patrick-Pruitt Cemetery

Patrick-Pruitt Cemetery – 457 Nokes Road, Dallas County (far southeast corner). East of IH 45, Malloy Bridge Rd. to Parkinson Rd. Nokes Rd. is off Parkinson Rd. On private property in a pasture that is posted with no trespassing sign. The cemetery is fenced and visible on aerial maps.   Not on Mapsco – Mapsco 89A.Q…
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John Jay Good

Transcribed from the Dallas Weekly Herald (Dallas, Texas), September 21, 1882 Death of Judge J. J. Good The melancholy tidings of the death of JUDGE GOOD were received here yesterday forenoon, and whilst none were surprised at the announcement, all were somewhat shocked by the suddenness of the event. He died on the night of the 17th,…
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Historic Bethel Cemetery

By Frances James (1922 – 2019) The Historic Bethel Cemetery in Coppell is near the intersection of Christi Lane and Moore Road off of Bethel School Road on the west side of the James Parrish Survey (about three miles northeast of the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport). This site was set aside for a cemetery by…
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John Milton McCoy

John Milton McCoy was a nephew of John C. McCoy. John M. McCoy was an early resident of Dallas, moving to the area in 1870. McCoy served as Dallas’ first city attorney. McCoy also wrote the 1871 charter for the City of Dallas. John M. McCoy (1838-1922) was the son of Lewis C. McCoy (1806…
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The Bachman and Taylor Families

Owned the Land in and around Love Field John Branaman & Margaret Morris Hughes Bachman Margaret Morris Hughes, daughter of William and Ailsey Hughes of Hughesville, Virginia, married John Branaman Bachman in 1845 in Maury County, Tennessee. She was born in 1824 in Stokes County, North Carolina. John Bachman was the son of Dr. Daniel…
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Albert Carver Cemetery

By Frances James (1922 – 2019) The Albert Carver Cemetery is located at the comer of Masters Drive and Bruton Road about nine miles southeast of the Dallas County Courthouse. The land for the family cemetery was donated by Albert Carver (1827-1911) from the 320 acres he acquired by trading a fine horse and saddle…
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Who was John C. McCoy?

John C. McCoy’s name appears often in the records of Dallas County Pioneer Association, as he was the first president of the group. Here is a brief timeline of his interesting life. For more information, please see the extensive biography for John C. McCoy, on our Pioneers page. Get future posts by email.

The Hawpe Family

This name with this spelling has weathered many storms for many years across America. The first of this branch of the family has been found 1785/86 as German immigrants from Pennsylvania to the Shenandoah Valley, and there are records of the name in Penn­ sylvania about fifty years earlier. This branch became diluted with Scots-Irish…
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Oak Cliff Cemetery/Beaty Cemetery

Another fine article by Frances James By Frances James (1922 – 2019) The address for the Oak Cliff Cemetery also known as the Beaty Cemetery is 1300 East Eighth Street in Oak Cliff. The first ten acre portion of the Beaty Cemetery is on land donated by William S. Beaty for a burial place where…
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The Mat Wyrick Family

Mat Wyrick was born in North Carolina in 1850. His family later moved to Bradley County, Tennessee where he married Melinda Jan Capp in 1870. They had two boys, Sim A. Wyrick and John S. Wyrick. Mat Wyrick followed his brother-in-law, James Capp, to Texas in about 1875. Mat Wyrick first stop­ped off at Fate,…
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