Connersville Cemetery
Round Top, Fayette County, Texas, USA
ERRONEOUSLY LISTED PREVIOUSLY AS THE RICHTER HILL BLACK CEMETERY
ROUND TOP, FAYETTE COUNTY, TEXAS
This cemetery is located adjacent to the Richters Cemetery off FM 1457 outside of Round Top. It sits below the hill from the white graves and is mowed. No doubt there are unmarked graves here. Surveyed 7 May 1990 by Kathy Carter, Helen Muras and Annette Ruckert and again in 1998 by David Collins of Missouri City.
A Footprints of Fayette article by David Collins:
William H. Ledbetter's Link to the Connersville Primitive Baptist Church and Cemetery
By David L. Collins, Sr.
In circa 1839, the William Hamilton Ledbetter family relocated from Perry, Tennessee to the James Winn League in northern Fayette County with the intent to establish a plantation. At the time, William and his wife, Jane Amanda Peacock, had four children. Five additional children were born in Fayette County. Prior to their move, records indicate that they already owned eleven slaves.
Ledbetter eventually amassed 1,559 acres in four leagues and by 1860, he owned 34 slaves and six slave houses, primarily in the James Winn League. Another major land owner in the same league was Christopher H. Taylor, who owned 4,000 acres of land and 46 slaves. Festival Hill at Round Top is now located on a small portion of Taylor's original land holdings. Three additional large plantation owners in the William Jack League were W.F. Wade with 1,100 acres, 54 slaves and eight slave houses; John R. Robison with 1,407 acres, 39 slaves and eight slave houses; and Samuel K. Lewis with 1,647 acres, 13 slaves and eleven slave houses. These three plantations, located just north and east of present-day Round Top, Texas, encompassed 9,713 acres with a total of 186 slaves.
The Connersville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery that fronts on FM 1457 is located just inside the west property line of land once owned by the William Hamilton Ledbetter family. This cemetery more than likely was used by Ledbetter and the other area plantation owners to bury their slaves long before the abolition of slavery, because no other black cemetery has been located within a three-mile radius of this area.
Based on an old County Survey Map now in the Fayette County Annex, there was a site labeled "Colored Church" located in the south line of the James Winn League (south line of the George Wagner property) and its intersection with the northeast corner of Richard Wagner's property. This is northwest of the intersection of Hackemack Road and FM 1457. The original church was probably torn down with no recorded history being left.
On December 10, 1883, Thomas Cooper of Lincoln County, Oklahoma purchased 11.25 acres of land from Thomas Albert Ledbetter, a son of William Hamilton Ledbetter. This land was described in the deed as being adjacent to the "Old School Presbyterian Church and Round Top Academy" land. Today this is the vicinity of the Richter Cemetery on FM 1457. Cooper gave permission for the black community to build a church – the Primitive Baptist Church. This would indicate that the original Primitive Baptist Church was the "Colored Church" that was located some 1100 feet southeast of the current Connersville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery and the Richter Cemetery.
Two years later, on November 10, 1885, Cooper sold ten and a half acres of this land to William Zander, reducing the original acreage to three-quarters of an acre. On September 1893, Thomas Cooper deeded the remaining land to the Primitive Baptist Church for $1.00. The deed gives no metes and bounds description, but merely states, "immediately surrounding the present site of the Primitive Baptist Church".
It is not known when the congregation ceased using their church at this original site, since there is no recorded history. In an apparent desire to build a new church, a group of individuals, probably descendants of earlier slaves, purchased 0.65 of an acre of land from Richard and Hannah Wagner for a new church site. It is interesting to note that part of this same tract of land was previously owned by the Primitive Baptist Church with no record of it ever being sold. The survey of the deed indicates that this 0.65 acre of land fronts FM 1457 adjacent to the Richter Cemetery. The property was deeded to the Connersville Primitive Baptist Church on May 20, 1957 for $243.00. The officers of the church who were to hold it in trust were J.J. Ferguson, Shelley Ferguson and Beatrice Breedlove.
J. Joseph Ferguson was the pastor of the Connersville Baptist Church at the time. He is interred in the church cemetery – the same cemetery that now serves as a burial site for many of the descendants of slaves who once lived on surrounding plantations and who are probably buried there as well in unmarked graves. One of the earliest marked graves in the Connersville Baptist Church Cemetery is that of George Craft, who died on March 1, 1904. One other noted person with a marked grave buried there is Piggie Diward, born in 1812, who died 100 years later in 1912.
Many African American pioneers and their descendants are buried in the historic Connersville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery, including members of the following families: Leonard, McCoy, Sampson, Shelby, Wade, Craft, Rivers, Williams, Townsend, Vincent, Lewis, Goins, Knotts, Boyd, Ferguson, Jefferson, Collins and Cole.
This history was obtained from several sources and compiled by the author with the hope that an historical marker can be erected at the site of the old Connersville Primitive Baptist Church and Cemetery in the foreseeable future.
ERRONEOUSLY LISTED PREVIOUSLY AS THE RICHTER HILL BLACK CEMETERY
ROUND TOP, FAYETTE COUNTY, TEXAS
This cemetery is located adjacent to the Richters Cemetery off FM 1457 outside of Round Top. It sits below the hill from the white graves and is mowed. No doubt there are unmarked graves here. Surveyed 7 May 1990 by Kathy Carter, Helen Muras and Annette Ruckert and again in 1998 by David Collins of Missouri City.
A Footprints of Fayette article by David Collins:
William H. Ledbetter's Link to the Connersville Primitive Baptist Church and Cemetery
By David L. Collins, Sr.
In circa 1839, the William Hamilton Ledbetter family relocated from Perry, Tennessee to the James Winn League in northern Fayette County with the intent to establish a plantation. At the time, William and his wife, Jane Amanda Peacock, had four children. Five additional children were born in Fayette County. Prior to their move, records indicate that they already owned eleven slaves.
Ledbetter eventually amassed 1,559 acres in four leagues and by 1860, he owned 34 slaves and six slave houses, primarily in the James Winn League. Another major land owner in the same league was Christopher H. Taylor, who owned 4,000 acres of land and 46 slaves. Festival Hill at Round Top is now located on a small portion of Taylor's original land holdings. Three additional large plantation owners in the William Jack League were W.F. Wade with 1,100 acres, 54 slaves and eight slave houses; John R. Robison with 1,407 acres, 39 slaves and eight slave houses; and Samuel K. Lewis with 1,647 acres, 13 slaves and eleven slave houses. These three plantations, located just north and east of present-day Round Top, Texas, encompassed 9,713 acres with a total of 186 slaves.
The Connersville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery that fronts on FM 1457 is located just inside the west property line of land once owned by the William Hamilton Ledbetter family. This cemetery more than likely was used by Ledbetter and the other area plantation owners to bury their slaves long before the abolition of slavery, because no other black cemetery has been located within a three-mile radius of this area.
Based on an old County Survey Map now in the Fayette County Annex, there was a site labeled "Colored Church" located in the south line of the James Winn League (south line of the George Wagner property) and its intersection with the northeast corner of Richard Wagner's property. This is northwest of the intersection of Hackemack Road and FM 1457. The original church was probably torn down with no recorded history being left.
On December 10, 1883, Thomas Cooper of Lincoln County, Oklahoma purchased 11.25 acres of land from Thomas Albert Ledbetter, a son of William Hamilton Ledbetter. This land was described in the deed as being adjacent to the "Old School Presbyterian Church and Round Top Academy" land. Today this is the vicinity of the Richter Cemetery on FM 1457. Cooper gave permission for the black community to build a church – the Primitive Baptist Church. This would indicate that the original Primitive Baptist Church was the "Colored Church" that was located some 1100 feet southeast of the current Connersville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery and the Richter Cemetery.
Two years later, on November 10, 1885, Cooper sold ten and a half acres of this land to William Zander, reducing the original acreage to three-quarters of an acre. On September 1893, Thomas Cooper deeded the remaining land to the Primitive Baptist Church for $1.00. The deed gives no metes and bounds description, but merely states, "immediately surrounding the present site of the Primitive Baptist Church".
It is not known when the congregation ceased using their church at this original site, since there is no recorded history. In an apparent desire to build a new church, a group of individuals, probably descendants of earlier slaves, purchased 0.65 of an acre of land from Richard and Hannah Wagner for a new church site. It is interesting to note that part of this same tract of land was previously owned by the Primitive Baptist Church with no record of it ever being sold. The survey of the deed indicates that this 0.65 acre of land fronts FM 1457 adjacent to the Richter Cemetery. The property was deeded to the Connersville Primitive Baptist Church on May 20, 1957 for $243.00. The officers of the church who were to hold it in trust were J.J. Ferguson, Shelley Ferguson and Beatrice Breedlove.
J. Joseph Ferguson was the pastor of the Connersville Baptist Church at the time. He is interred in the church cemetery – the same cemetery that now serves as a burial site for many of the descendants of slaves who once lived on surrounding plantations and who are probably buried there as well in unmarked graves. One of the earliest marked graves in the Connersville Baptist Church Cemetery is that of George Craft, who died on March 1, 1904. One other noted person with a marked grave buried there is Piggie Diward, born in 1812, who died 100 years later in 1912.
Many African American pioneers and their descendants are buried in the historic Connersville Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery, including members of the following families: Leonard, McCoy, Sampson, Shelby, Wade, Craft, Rivers, Williams, Townsend, Vincent, Lewis, Goins, Knotts, Boyd, Ferguson, Jefferson, Collins and Cole.
This history was obtained from several sources and compiled by the author with the hope that an historical marker can be erected at the site of the old Connersville Primitive Baptist Church and Cemetery in the foreseeable future.
Nearby cemeteries
Round Top, Fayette County, Texas, USA
- Total memorials406
- Percent photographed88%
- Percent with GPS2%
Round Top, Fayette County, Texas, USA
- Total memorials22
- Percent photographed0%
- Added: 25 Oct 2021
- Find a Grave Cemetery ID: 2740661
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