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Maxdale Cemetery
Photo courtesy Gary Castillo, November 2014 |
History
in a Pecan Shell
A post office opened
here in 1883 although there had been some settlement prior to that.
The population the following year was reported to be 20. A school
and two churches were soon evident, although the community had to
wait for a store. By 1914 a store was in operation and eleven years
later, Maxdale hit its population high-water mark with 50 residents.
The post office closed in 1926 and the town began a long decline,
reaching just 15 people in the later 1960s. The town now has a community
center located just east of the former town and Maxdale only appears
on detailed Bell County
maps. |
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Historical Marker
(S of bridge):
MAXDALE CEMETERY
Established in
the 1860s to serve the rural community of Pleasant Grove, this
cemetery is one of the oldest in Bell County. Land for the graveyard
was given by Frank N. McBryde, Sr., whose 1883 application for a post
office for the community resulted in the name change to Maxdale.
The earliest documented grave is that of Louisa Marlar (1849-1867),
although an 1863 tombstone marks the site of a grave reinterred here
from another location. Others interred here include pioneer settlers
and veterans of the Civil War, World
War I, World
War II, and Korea.
(1989) |
The 1914 Through
Truss Bridge in Maxdale
Photo courtesy Gary Castillo, November 2014 |
Another view
of the 1914 Through Truss Bridge
Photo courtesy Barclay
Gibson, December 2008 |
Maxdale
Through Truss Bridge plaque
Photo courtesy Barclay
Gibson, December 2008 |
Maxdale 1863
Cemetery gate
Photo courtesy Barclay
Gibson, December 2008 |
Bell
County Texas 1907 Postal Map showing Maxdale
(Western corner of Bell
County)
Courtesy Texas General Land Office |
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and vintage/historic photos, please contact
us. |
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