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Cemeteries
Nevill's Chapel
Masonic
(Mt. Pleasant)
Forest Lawn Memorial Park
a/k/a
Mt. Pleasant Memorial Park
Farmer's Academy
Cortznes (Mt. Pleasant)
a/k/a
Old West Side,
Reed, Searcy, Sheppard
Phillips-Taylor
(Cookville, Texas)
East New Hope
White Oak Springs
Green Hill
(Green Hill Community)
Edwards (Mt. Pleasant)
a/k/a
Colonial Hill or
Mount Pleasant
Blundell
(Monticello Area)
Hickory Hill
Gladewater
(Gladewater Community)
Riddle No. 2
(Old Union Community)
Greathouse
(Mt. Pleasant, Texas)
Jones Chapel
a/k/a
Concord, Murphree
Long
Adams Chapel
Barrett
Belcher
(Talco Area)
Binnion
Bivens
(Monticello Community)
a/k/a
Old Monticello
Blevins-Cason
(Cason Community)
a/k/a
Cason
Blodgett
(Blodgett Community)
Blundis
(Monticello Area)
Brantley
(Monticello-Blodgett Area)
Bridges Chapel
(Bridges Chapel Commun.)
Center Grove
(Center Grove Comm.)
a/k/a
Yancey
William Cook
D.M. Cook
Cookville
(Cookville, TX)
Cooper's Chapel
(Cooper's Chapel Comm.)
Cress
(Abandoned)
Damascus
DeShields
(Sugar Hill Community)
Emerson
Evans
Evergreen
Fort Sherman
a/k/a
Miller
Goodman
Harris
a/k/a
Betheny, Boase
Johnson-Batte
a/k/a
Batte, Johnson, Smith
Justiss
Keith No. 1
(Cookville Area)
Keith No. 3
(Cookville, TX)
Kirby
Liberty Hill
Lone Star
(Lone Star Community)
Marshall Springs
Murrie
McCrary
a/k/a
Dorsey, West New Hope
Old Union
Lev Old
Parker
Piney
(Piney Community)
Pitt
(Abandoned)
Riddle No. 1
Roper
a/k/a
Panther
Rountree/Embry
(Argo Area)
Russell
(Abandoned)
Shady Grove
Shiloh
Shultice
Sneed
Snodgrass
Springhill (North)
Springhill (Southeast)
Tabb-Pearson
(Abandoned)
Talco
(Talco, Texas)
Tranquil
Traylor
Union Hill
Williams
Williams-Glass
Winfield
(Winfield, TX)
a/k/a
Barrett Cemetry
Woodmen of the World
(Monticello Community)
Wilhite
Emmanuel
(Cookville, Texas)
Louis “Moses” Rose, the only man to leave the Alamo before Santa Anna's forces overwhelmed it and killed everyone remaining there, is rumored to be buried in an un-marked grave in Plot IV, Row 10, #16 of the Green Hill Cemetery.

Louis Rose of Alamo fame was born in Laferée, Ardennes, France.  He was a soldier much of his life and never married.  Louis Rose was nicknamed “Moses” because at age 50 he was considerably older than anyone else at the Alamo.  The Handbook of Texas states that Louis “Moses” Rose moved to Logansport, Louisiana, in 1842 where he lived with Aaron Ferguson's family until his death in 1850-1851.

Newsgroups from that area say that he is believed to be buried in Aaron Ferguson's family cemetery, located about 4 miles north of Logansport, La.  We find this more plausible since he had personal ties there and it would have been difficult to transport his body to Titus County before the days of modern embalming and travel, particularly when he had no known ties in our area.  There is no tangible proof that he is buried in Titus County.



Jerry Scoggins (1911 - December 7, 2004) was a Mt. Pleasant native who left his hometown seeking fame and fortune and found it.  Scoggins was lead singer of The Cass County Boys, a band that became famous in the 1930s while performing on Dallas, Texas, radio stations and gained later fame on Gene Autry's 1946 "Melody Ranch" radio program.  Scoggins and his band appeared in over 19 films including, "Sioux City Sue" (1946), "Twilight On The Rio Grande" (1947), "Riders Of The Whistling Pines" (1949), "Apache Country" (1952), and "On Top Of Old Smoky" (1953).

Scoggins was best known for recording "The Ballad of Jed Clampett", theme song of the "The Beverly Hillbillies" television series that ran from 1962 to 1971.  He later left the entertainment industry and became a stock broker but came out of retirement in 1993 to sing the song once again for "The Beverly Hillbillies" movie starring Jim Varney and Erika Eleniak.

In 1996 the Cass County Boys were inducted into the Western Music Hall of Fame. They also received a Golden Boot Award from the Motion Picture and Television Fund.

Jerry Scoggins passed away from natural causes in his Westlake Village, CA home on December 7, 2004.  He is buried in the Columbarium of Peace 19-7 (back wall, right middle of bottom row) of Pierce Brothers Valley Oaks Memorial Park, Westlake Village, Los Angeles County, California.  (Obituary from findagrave.com and Wikipedia.com)

Below is an alphabetical list of Titus County cemeteries whose burials have been indexed in the Titus Cemetery Search database.


Benjamin Gooch, County Surveyor of Red River County,  Clerk of Red River County Land Board, and an elected Representative from Red River Co.  to the First State of Texas Legislature, pioneer Titus County statesman who authored the act creating Titus County and built the first home in Mt. Pleasant, is buried in the Justiss Cemetery.
Henry Clay Thruston, one of the tallest men to fight in the Civil War at 7 feet, 7-1/2 inches, is buried with his wife and son in the Edwards Cemetery in Mount Pleasant.  During one campaign, the two sides are said to have stopped hostilities while he and David V. Buskirk, at 6' 10-1/2" and one of the tallest men in the Union army, were photographed together.  (We have also seen his name spelled “Thouston” and “Thurston”-our spelling is from the four family monuments).
Much of Titus County's history can be found in our cemeteries.  We've listed a few interesting burials below to peak your interest.  Cemeteries are a large subject in their own right.  Due to the amount of space they require, we cover them as thoroughly as possible in our sister-website, Titus Cemetery Search.  Titus County cemetery names are listed below their thumbnail photos below.  Each cemetery marked by a red star has a complete page on our Titus Cemetery Search website.  The page contains a brief history, road maps, photos of the cemetery, decoration day information, and other information about it.

Please feel free to visit Titus Cemetery Search at http://www.tituscemeteries.com.  If you need burial information for someone buried in Titus County, our burial database (which is not posted on line) contains over 27,000 burials, 18,000 marker photos, and 9,800+ obituaries.  We will be glad to e-mail you any information we may have about anyone you request.  Best of all, it's free!


Robert & Mary Turner's A Glimpse of Titus County, Texas History
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