Texas Historical Marker #13107
Lake Creek Cemetery. In the late 1800s, this part of Texas was open range. After the U.S. government removed Native American tribes to Indian Territory (Oklahoma), new settlers began arriving as early as 1874. Disputes between ranchers, who favored the open range, and homesteading farmers divided the settlers, but Archer County organized in 1880, despite opposition. Early farmers in what became the Lake Creek community included the Gant, Edgin and Presley families, as well as Edward A. and Fannie McDonald, who, c. 1900, buried a visiting relative, known today only as Grandma Crisp, on their land. Hers is the first marked grave at this location, which the McDonalds donated to the county for use as a community cemetery in 1908. A school and church later developed, and residents maintained the burial ground and held Decoration Day services. In 1981, descendants of those buried here joined others from the community to form a cemetery association. Four years later, the county conveyed the property to the group, which continues to preserve the cemetery, the final resting place of military veterans and generations of area residents. Historic Texas Cemetery - 2002 #13107
?, Scotland, TX, United States
Texas Historical Marker #02677
J. H. Meurer Home. German native John H. Meurer (b. 1850) settled his family in this area about 1900 when he became a land agent for H. J. Scott of the Clark and Plumb Company. In selling over 60,000 acres of land, Meurer helped to establish the towns of Windthorst (6 mi. S) and Scotland (named for H. J. Scott), both primarily German Catholic settlements. Meurer had this one-and-a-half story home built in 1911. The 11-room house with wraparound porch remained in the Meurer family until 1941 when Saint Boniface Catholic Church purchased it to serve as a residence for parish priests. (1982) #2677
?, Scotland, TX, United States