ALLEN CEMETERY - ALLEN
McDermott Drive (FM2170)
Latitude 33 06 02N Longitude 96 39 55 W
McDermott Drive (FM2170)
Latitude 33 06 02N Longitude 96 39 55 W
The town of Allen was started around 1872 when the railroad went through. It was named for Ebenezer Allen, who was attorney general of Texas.
The cemetery was started by Lodge No. 249 of the IOOF, International Order of Odd Fellows, in 1884 when it purchased land from John Whisenant. Blue Ridge, Nevada, Farmersville, and Princeton also have IOOF cemeteries. There are several deeds for the cemetery. One deed is recorded in Vol 413, p 388. It adds an additional 1.17 acres of land to the cemetery and shows the plat map on page 389.
The cemetery has a large stone entrance and an iron fence across the front. It covers about 3 acres of land. Cottonwood Creek runs behind it.
The oldest marked grave is for Rebecca Hamilton, who died in 1883. It is said that there were burials before that time. In the southeast end there is a small plot where slaves were once buried. The markers for the slaves have been lost.
The cemetery has a historical marker and is well taken care of. The city of Allen maintains the cemetery. It is still active. There is an Allen Cemetery Association. The cemetery has a Decoration Day every year.
Cemeteries of Collin County, Texas, by Joy Gough
ALLEN CEMETERY
LOCATED ON LAND PURCHASED FROM MR. AND MRS. JOHN W. WHISENANT, THIS CEMETERY WAS FORMALLY ESTABLISHED ON APRIL 5, 1884, BY THE INTERNATIONAL ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS, LOCAL LODGE NO. 249. ENCOMPASSING ALMOST THREE ACRES OF LAND, THE CEMETERY HAS SERVED THE ALLEN COMMUNITY FOR OVER A CENTURY. THE OLDEST LEGIBLE GRAVE MARKER HERE IS THAT OF REBECCA L. HAMILTON (D. 1883), ALTHOUGH LOCAL ORAL TRADI- TION HOLDS THAT EARLIER GRAVES MAY EXIST, INCLUDING A SLAVE BURIAL GROUND IN THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF THE PROPERTY. TOMBSTONE INSCRIPTIONS REVEAL EVIDENCE OF EARLY EPIDEMICS AND INCLUDE THE NAMES OF A NUMBER OF VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS. ROBERT J. CUFFMAN (D. 1918) WAS KILLED IN THE MEUSE-ARGONNE OFFENSIVE IN WORLD WAR I. MAHLON BRACKNEY SERVED IN THE SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR. ALSO REPRESENTED ON GRAVE MARKERS HERE ARE NOTABLE EARLY CITIZENS OF THE COMMUNITY, INCLUDING PERMELIA FORD, A PIONEER SETTLER, AND DOCTORS H. N. COMPTON AND WILLIAM F. WOLFORD. THE ALLEN CEMETERY ASSOCIATION, ORGANIZED IN 1899, CARES FOR THE HISTORIC GRAVEYARD AND SPONSORS AN ANNUAL DECORATION DAY. Texas Historical marker, 1988 |