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La Grange Cemetery, La Grange, Texas

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Profiles

  • Cheryl Ann Buscha (1957 - 1957)
    Daughter of Benjamin & Bernice Sumbera Buscha
  • Frank Joseph Hanacek (1921 - 2010)
    Frank J. Hanacek, 89, died Tuesday night, Nov. 30, 2010 in St. Marks Medical Center. He was born Feb. 8, 1921, the son of John and Anna (Nemec) Hanacek. He served his country in the U. S. Navy and wa...
  • SFC Benjamin William "Ben" Buscha (1928 - 2003)
    SFC US ARMY KOREA
  • Bernice Rose Buscha-Heinrich (1935 - 2017)
    Bernice (Sumbera) Buscha Heinrich, 81, of La Grange, Texas, passed away on Thursday, January 12, 2017. Bernice was born in Ammannsville, Texas on July 9, 1935, the daughter of George and Rosie (Dusek)...
  • John George Sumbera (1915 - 1981)

This project is for those buried in La Grange Cemetery, La Grange, Fayette County, Texas.

The cemetery is also known as Lagrange City Cemetery and New City Cemetery.

From the Fayette Heritage Museum and Archives:

This burial ground dates back to the early days of La Grange and Fayette County. The oldest marked burial is for Joseph G. King who died July 30, 1840. On the 21st of May 1853, before the incorporation of La Grange and 13 years after the first burial, the "Old Cemetery" was owned by James Seaton Lester, Albert C. Horton, Joseph Shaw and P.V. Shaw. They conveyed the property to George W. Sinks, Wm. G. Webb, Charles S. Longcope, John H. Carter and F.W. Grassmeyer to hold it in trust for the citizens of La Grange as a burying ground. After the town was incorporated, and on the 3rd day of July 1854, the trustees above named, conveyed it to the city of La Grange.
In 1867 the "Yellow Fever Scourge" befell the small town of La Grange. From August to November the epidemic ran its course and left more than 200 dead, nearly one-fifth the population of the town. Many deaths went unreported; bodies rudely prepared for burial stood in piles within the cemetery fence. Mass burials took place, with 6 or 7 bodies to a grave.

By 1872, the cemetery was a wilderness of grass and weeds, cattle and hogs were frequent trespassers, monuments had been injured and graves trampled on. No one ever thought of visiting there, except to bury another "pilgrim".

On April 17, 1873, fourteen ladies met and organized the Ladies Cemetery Association. It was the first such organization chartered in Texas. These women raised money and replaced the wooden fence surrounding the site with an iron fence in 1883. Later they added a waterworks, settees, and a covered resting-place in the center of the cemetery. A sexton was hired to do additional work. The group was active until the late 1970's when the upkeep of the cemetery was turned back to the City of La Grange. The cemetery has suffered from acts of vandalism over the years.

The cemetery is divided into 2 sections. Section 1 contains lots 1 through 135; Section 2 contains lots 1 through 161. Lot numbers used are shown inside a O on the map. A map of the cemetery is located in the archives reading room.

At present the cemetery is enclosed by an iron fence and is bordered by Travis (Business Hwy 77), College, & Colorado Streets. Kathy Carter and Helen Muras recorded this cemetery in 1988 by using the cemetery index and map prepared and revised by Walter P. Freytag and M.J. von Minden in June 1975. Kathy Carter revised the report in February 1999. Additional yellow fever dates and information is taken from the States Right Democrat newspaper dated 12-6-1867, sited as "SRD" in this index. Most of the same information is found in Fayette County: Past and Present edited by M. Williams on pages 42-44. Another source cited is a news article from the La Grange Journal of May 27, 1926.

Find a Grave

Fayette County History