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Dateline: September
13,
2001
Marker
secures history of Rowe Cemetery
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
More
than 60 people were present Saturday as Donley County’s newest
historical marker was unveiled at the Rowe Cemetery near Hedley.
The
cemetery was established in 1898 when Isaac Smith sold two acres of his
land for use as a graveyard by the community of Rowe. Four children of the
Beedy family were the first remains to be interned there.
By
1911, Rowe – which was named for English-born pioneer and RO Ranch
founder Alfred Rowe – had become a ghost town as its residents flocked
to a new settlement with more favorable soil and water. The new settlement
was called Hedley.
The
old town’s namesake was also ill fated. The Englishman was a first class
passenger on the HMS Titanic and was frozen to death in the icy waters of
the Atlantic when the great ship struck an iceberg and sank on April 15,
1912.
The
citizens of Hedley never forgot their origins or the old graveyard. By
1912, the Hedley Cemetery Association had been formed to care for the Rowe
Cemetery. More land was purchased from the descendants of Isaac Smith in
1915 and 1953, which brought the total area to 12 acres.
In
1914, the association was reorganized as the Rowe Cemetery Association,
and it continued to raise funds and care for the cemetery until 1951 when
the responsibility was turned over to the City of Hedley.
Today,
donations are still the major source of income for the Rowe Cemetery, and
volunteers are still needed for maintenance of its grounds. The Rowe
Cemetery Association Trust was established in 1984 to provide revenue that
can be used for perpetual care.
In
1988, the trust board installed two arched gates, and the Hedley chapter
of the American Legion erected a memorial in 1990 to honor the veterans
that fought from the Civil War to the Vietnam War.
During
Saturday’s program, Bruce Howard gave the invocation, and Jack Moreman
welcomed the crowd assembled.
The
Hedley Choir sang “The Star Spangled Banner” as Bufford Holland
presented the American flag, and Skyler Conatser led the Pledge of
Allegiance. The Choir also sang “Texas, Our Texas” while Connie DeBord
presented the Lone Star Flag. Conatser led the pledge to the Texas flag.
Jean
Stavenhagen read a short history of the cemetery.
“This
beautiful old cemetery before us this morning has survived for over a
hundred years, outliving the town for which it was named but retaining the
dignity of its English namesake,” Stavenhagen said. “Its silent earth
is filled with the early pioneers who paved our way, the soldiers who
fought our battles, and the families who loved us.
“Rowe
Cemetery exists today because of the long line of people throughout the
past century who dedicated themselves to its support and protection. The
placement of this impressive marker assures the Rowe Cemetery of its
significant place in history.”
Afterward,
M.O. Weatherly and Randy Shaw unveiled the marker. Lyndon Messer read the
inscription.
The
principal people who worked to secure the marker were recognized by Doyle
Messer and Stavenhagen. The program was closed out with Barbara Collins
singing “Amazing Grace” and “God Bless America.”
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