Marker Details

Washington Cemetery [Replacement]


2911 Washington Avenue

Houston , 77007

Notes:
Marker application accepted by THC, Class of 2012, 12HR10; marker received c07-03-2013; Washington Cemetery, adjoining west side of Glenwood Cemetery; entrance gate off of Washington Ave. closed; Emma Seelye's grave is in Section G, Lot 26, in group of 10 small markers; Gammell gravesite in Section A, approx. 50 yards south from north cemetery road; Ellis Benson marker in Section B; Marker; REPLACEMENT MARKER for # 10801 (1980), NEW location in cemetery; Bernice Mistrot indicates that NO dedication is planned
Directions: Cemetery adjoins west side of Glenwood Cemetery, hours 7a-5p; Main gate on Washington Ave. closed, access via Glenwood Cemetery, right at guard house, turn right approx. 100' south of Charlotte Allen marker; Washington Cemetery marker is at the second intersection, south end of Section B

Key Time Period: 1877 - 1892 Post-Reconstruction

Corretions/New Research:

Marker Text: The Deutsche Gesellschaft von Houston, founded in 1875, established the German Society Cemetery in February 1887 by purchasing this property, then located outside the city limits, from the heirs of John Lawrence and Thomas Hart. Twelve-space family lots were sold to society members for $10 and to the public for $25. It was renamed Washington Cemetery in July 1918 due to anti-German sentiment during World War I.



Though headstones of reinterred persons show birth dates as early as 1800 and death dates as early as 1855, the earliest known burial is that of three-year-old Pauline Ottilie Zeitler, on March 31, 1887. At least 15 citizens of the Republic of Texas and immigrants from more than 20 nations lie at rest here. Eighteen lots are owned by fraternal, labor, or veterans groups. More than 7600 persons are interred here, with more added each year.



Also buried here are more than 300 veterans of nine wars, from the Black Hawk War of 1832 to Vietnam, including more than 135 Confederate and Union veterans. Sarah Emma Evelyn (Edmonds) Seelye, aka Franklin Thompson, is noted for writing a book about her service as a man in the federal army, 1861-63.



After the last charter expired in 1947, the superintendent’s widow and her housekeeper tried to maintain the cemetery, but they did not have the resources needed. By the 1970s, it was badly overgrown. Concerned Citizens for Washington Cemetery Care (CCWCC) was founded in 1977, cleared away the jungle-like growth, and cared for the cemetery over the next 22 years. In 1997, CCWCC became the first group in Texas legally granted the authority to "restore, operate, and maintain a historic cemetery" under a 1995 Texas law; that authority was transferred to adjacent Glenwood Cemetery in 1999.



Historic Texas cemetery - 2012

Marker is property of the State of Texas
Marker Type: Marker with Post
Historical Org: Historic Texas Cemetery with THC Marker

Key Map Information: 492 J

GPS Coordinates: 29 49.895, 59 23.301

Precinct No: 2

Marker No: 18068