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Pleasanton City Cemetery, Pleasanton, Texas

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  • Judson Wayne Smelley (1935 - 2013)
    It is with deep sorrow that we announce the death of Wayne Smelley (Bandera, Texas), who passed away on March 12, 2013, at the age of 77, leaving to mourn family and friends. Family and friends can sen...
  • Bobbie Delaine Smelley (1935 - 2015)
    Bobbie Delaine Smelley of Jourdanton, went home to our Heavenly Father on Wednesday, April 22, 2015 at the age of 79. She was born September 7, 1935 in Tivoli, Texas to Hershel and Susan (Scott) Marsha...

Begun in 1865 as a family burial ground, the Pleasanton City Cemetery is a reflection of the history of the community from its earliest days. The first burial was that of three-year-old Gustave B. Doak, whose parents, Jonathan and Mary Elizabeth (Zumwalt) Doak, buried him on their property, which was then on the western outskirts of Pleasanton. Friends and relatives of the Doak family came to use the cemetery, which first appeared in county deed records when Jonathan Doak sold his property in 1884 to George Washington Marion Duck, reserving one acre for the cemetery. Additional donations of land over the years enlarged the acreage of the cemetery.

Burials in the Pleasanton City Cemetery include a number of infants and children in the older section, reflecting the harshness of pioneer life in the community's early years. Also buried here are Dr. James H. Lyons (1805-1881), who served in the second Texas legislature, was a Mexican war veteran and twice mayor of San Antonio; Mexican War veteran captain Hartwell Coleman Fountain (1810-1886); Graves Peeler (1886-1977), who is credited with helping save the Longhorn cattle breed in the 1930s; and a number of local officials and community leaders.

Known in the 19th century as the Doak Cemetery and as Sandhill Cemetery, the historic burial ground is maintained by the Pleasanton Cemetery Association.

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