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Cherokee County, Texas

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Profiles

  • Rev. Christopher A. Langston (1852 - 1923)
    Daily Democrat-Forum (Maryville, Missouri), Thursday, March 8, 1923, [p. 1] C. A. Langston, 70, Dies at Stepdaughter's Home Had Lived With His Step-Daughter Mrs. Lloyd Burch—Funeral at Hopkins Tomorrow...
  • Samuel Henry Clayton (1867 - 1901)
  • E. B. Lusk (1927 - 1990)
    Graveside services for E. B. Lusk, 62, of Rusk, were at 1:30 p.m. Sunday at the Pleasant Grove Cemetery, Maydelle, with the Rev Keith Hassell officiating. Arrangements were under the direction of Boren...
  • Source: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/100404577/amanda-jane-nichols
    James Criswell Campbell (1793 - 1854)
    Biography James Criswell Campbell was born in 1793 in Wilcox, Alabama, United States, Wilcox County, Alabama, United States. His parents were Capt John Campbell and Rhoda Campbell . James married Clo...
  • Dewey Frank Finklea (1905 - 1954)

The Hasinai group of the Caddo tribe built a village in the area in around AD 800 and continued to live in the area until the 1830s, when they migrated to the Brazos River. The federal government moved them to the Brazos Indian Reservation in 1855 and later to Oklahoma.

The Cherokee, Delaware, Shawnee, and Kickapoo Native American peoples began settling in the area around 1820. The Texas Cherokee tried unsuccessfully to gain a grant to their own land from the Mexican government.

Sam Houston, adopted son of Chief Oolooteka (John Jolly) of the Cherokee, negotiated the January 14, 1836, treaty between Chief Bowl of the Cherokee and the Republic of Texas. On December 16, 1837, the Texas Senate declared the treaty null and void, and encroachment upon Cherokee lands continued. On October 5, 1838, Indians massacred members of the Isaac Killough family at their farm northwest of the site of present Jacksonville, leading to the Cherokee War of 1839 and the expulsion of some to Oklahoma. Some went to Monclova in Mexico, and some to Rusk and Gregg counties (many had relatives among the Choctaw/Chickasaw/Creek community there). Later, in 1844, President Polk issued an executive order known as "The Right to return", allowing many Cherokee to return to Texas. Some came to what is now Cherokee County.

Domingo Terán de los Ríos and Father Damián Massanet explored the area on behalf of Spain in 1691. Louis Juchereau de St. Denis began trading with the Hasinais in 1705. Nuestro Padre San Francisco de los Tejas was originally established in 1690, but was re-established in 1716 by Captain Domingo Ramon. It was abandoned again because of French incursions and re-established in 1721 by the Marques de San Miguel de Aguyao.

In 1826, empresario David G. Burnet received a grant from the Coahuila y Tejas legislature to settle 300 families. The settlers were mostly from the Southern states, and brought the lifestyle of that region with them. By contracting how many families each grantee could settle, the government sought to have some control over colonization.

Cherokee County was formed from land given by Nacogdoches County in 1846. It was organized in the same year. The town of Rusk became the county seat. Cherokee County voted in favor of secession from the Union, during the build-up to the American Civil War.

In 1872, the International – Great Northern Railroad caused Jacksonville to relocate two miles east, to be near the tracks. The Kansas and Gulf Short Line Railway was built north-to-south through the county between 1882 and 1885. The Texas and New Orleans Railroad in 1905, and the Texas State Railroad in 1910, each gave rise to new county towns along their tracks.

Cemeteries

Cemeteries of Texas

Links

Wikipedia