Roark / Russell / Primm / Ulsh / Going / Neelans - Related Families and Individuals

Citations


Dee Thomas Stockton Sr.

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Frances Price Shell

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Dee Thomas Stockton Sr.

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Lelia Ann Sappington

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Hayden Matlerson Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Edith L. Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Edward Fulton Connell

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Sophia Western Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


J. Elizabeth Connell

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Edward Fulton Connell Jr.

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


George M. Connell

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Douglas Hayden Stockton Jr.

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Myrtle E. Burditt

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Mary Talbot

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Wellborn Barton Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Roy B. Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Infant Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Fred Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Hugh McIntyre Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Bessie White

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Mary Elizabeth Stockton

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


James Kuykendall Knight Sr.

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


James Kuykendall Knight Jr.

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Joseph Hayden Knight

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Margie M. Knight

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Andrew Stockton Knight

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Ada Stockton Knight

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).


Infant Grantham

1STOCKTON CEMETERY - Bell County, Texas, From BELL COUNTY TOMBSTONE RECORDS, Vol 1 of 2 & is used by permission of the West Bell Genealogical Society.
SUBJECT: Stockton Family Cemetery
HISTORICAL MARKER #: 5126
LOCATION: CR 487 NW of Bartlett (also Harold Clark Road) to junction with Stockton Road (cemetery is on NE corner), Bartlett, Bell County, TX
NOTES: Reference is made to Moses Allen here.

The Stockton Family Cemetery is located on land originally granted in 1859 by Texas governor Hardin R. Runnels to Moses Allen, a veteran of the Siege of Bexar. Douglas Hayden Stockton and his wife Mary Elizabeth (White) brought their family to Bell County in 1870. With partner J.O. Darby, the Stocktons purchased over 1,200 acres of the Moses Allen land grant that year. The Stocktons soon built a residence near this site. This cemetery was established in April 1890 upon the death of the Stocktons' fifteen-year-old son, Simion Carothers Stockton. Years later, on December 15, 1908, Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stokton legally designated this property as a family cemetery. The cemetery, which contains over eighty graves and is still in use by the Stocktons' descendants, documents over one hundred years of family history. Those interred here include Douglas and Mary Elizabeth Stockton and twelve of their fourteen children; Ead White, a former slave who remained with the family after the Civil War; numerous children and infants; and three family members who drowned in a hurricane in Corpus Christi in 1919. (1991).