EARLY BURIALS IN ROSE HILL CEMETERY
1847 - 1869
Humboldt, Tennessee
Information
compiled by
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name to see photo of that stone
All photos courtesy of John Blankenship
1) Eliza J. Scott, wife of Dr. W. D. Scott Died: Sept. 26, 1847 Age: 27 years, 11 months, 13 days
2) Harry H. Warmath Born: November 25, 1799 Died: October 9, 1849
3) George A. Sharp Born: 1830 Died: 1859
4) Johnnie A. Sharp Born: 1858 Died: 1859
5) Jas. A. McGee Born: August 30, 1827 Died: August 10, 1864
6) T. N. Ferrell, father of T.C. Ferrell Born: 1837 Died: 1864
7) Mallie E., daughter of H.T. and M.F. Johnson Born: Feb. 17, 1861 Died: July 7, 1865
8) William H., only son of Dr. W.G. and Booker Inman Born: March 27, 1867 Died: July 19, 1867
9) Richard Cross Born: Sept. 11, 1828 Died: Jan. 15, 1868
10) Albert Jones ( G.S. Lannom said in 1932
history that this is first person buried here)
Died: October 11,
1868
Age: 61 years, 2 days
11) Mary J. Transou, daughter of B.F. and S.A. Transou Died: November 6, 1868
12) David Cornelius Dickey (said by Nelson A.
Cresap to be first or second person to be buried here)
Born: April 18, 1822 Died:
December 11, 1868
14) D. F. McIntosh Born: Oct. 24, 1810 Died: Dec. 30, 1869 Aged: 59 years, 2 months, 5 days
15) Julia A. Read, wife of James Mitchell Born: Feb. 22, 1839 Died: March 21, 1869
16) Annie,
daughter of John and Nannie Lee Born: October 28, 1867 Died: August 9, 1869
Aged: 1 year, 9 months, 12 days
17) D. F. McIntosh Born: Oct. 24, 1810 Died: Dec. 30, 1869 Aged: 59 years, 2 months, 5 days
HISTORY OF BURIALS IN ROSE HILL CEMETERY
Rose Hill Cemetery lies in the southern part of Humboldt, situated on the most beautiful grounds. The grounds are dotted with many one hundred plus year old trees and some of the most beautifully carved tombstones in the state. Here lie the men, women, and children whom are the founders of Humboldt. Many that lie here played major roles and some didn’t play such major roles, but all played a very important part in the founding of Humboldt, Tennessee.
The question has been asked to me by
many people why the cemetery was named Rose Hill. In my response I always say
“there must have been roses growing here at one time”. Of all the research I
have done and the people I have asked nobody remembers any roses ever being in
the cemetery. So the roses must have been removed many years ago. Also the
question is asked when was it named Rose Hill. That is another question that I
cannot completely answer. I do know in 1877 it was called “cemetery”, so the
name Rose Hill must have came sometime after that. But those are questions that
will probably never be answered. Like I say roses or not Rose Hill Cemetery is
one beautiful burying grounds in Tennessee and one day I will be laid to rest in
this sacred ground alongside the “founders of Humboldt” whom I respect so
dearly.
This is the most complete history of
early burials in Rose Hill Cemetery that could be compiled with the few records
available.
Eliza J. Scott has the earliest
tombstone in the cemetery. Eliza died September 24, 1847. She
is the wife of Rev. W.D. Scott. According to histories of Humboldt that have
been written in the past, this is not the first burial here. According to those
histories, the first burial came much later, in 1868. There are two things that
could be possible. One, is that she could have been buried there before the
cemetery was established as the city cemetery. Two, her tombstone and body were
moved from somewhere else at a later date. See Humboldt was chartered in 1866
and she could have already been buried there, and the histories said that the
1868 burials were the first official burials in the "city cemetery".
But anyway this is the earliest stone here.
The next oldest stone is Henry H.
Warmath who died October 9, 1849. He settled about 3 miles east of Humboldt
between the Esquire Lewis Road and
the Mullins Road. Recently I received some information from Mr. Billy Warmath,
of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and Mr. Frank Warmath, of Humboldt, Tennessee that
the stones(Henry and his wife Elizabeth) were moved about 20 years ago to Rose
Hill Cemetery. According to Frank
Warmath, his father J. Frank Warmath moved two people to Humboldt. These must be
the two people his father moved. They were moved here from a cemetery off of the
Mullins Road on the Madison and Gibson County line. They are located on the John
W. Warmath lot. (John W. Warmath is the son of Henry Warmath.) So Henry Warmath
was not originally buried in Rose Hill Cemetery.
The next oldest stone is George A. Sharp
who died in 1859. He is the father of Oscar C. Sharp, who owned a dry goods
store in Humboldt for many years. I do believe this man could have been
originally buried here, because his family had already settled in the area back
in the 1840's. His old tombstone was removed many years ago and replaced with a
more modern one. (NOTE: Geo. A.
Sharp’s widow, Martha Howse Sharp, married Geo.’s brother, T.A. Sharp and he
raised Oscar C. Sharp.)
The next stone is of a child named
Johnnie A. Sharp who died in 1859 also. I do believe he was originally buried
here. He is buried right near George A. Sharp. I assume he is the son of George
A. Sharp. He also has a newer tombstone.
The next burial is James A. McGee who
died August 10, 1864. McGee was one of the first druggist in the new town of
Humboldt. James A. McGee was
married to Elizabeth Gillespie, the daughter of John C. Gillespie. Elizabeth
died in 1856 and is buried in the McLeary Cemetery west of town by her father. I
believe that James A. McGee was originally buried in Rose Hill. His
stone is located near Sharp. (Note: When McGee died, D.M. McKnight acquired his
drug business.)
The next burial is T.N. Ferrell who died
in 1864. His original stone has been replaced with a newer one some years back. He
is buried by his son, T.C. Ferrell. I figure he was originally buried here.
(NOTE: It has been written that the Ferrell's owned some of the land that Rose
Hill Cemetery is now located on, but this can not be proven. This info comes
from Mr. Howard Choate.)
The next burial is Mallie E. Johnson.
She died July 7, 1865 and is the
daughter of Hiram T. Johnson. Johnson was the first lawyer to practice in
Humboldt, he came from Purdy, Tennessee in 1865 with his father Milton H.
Johnson. I am pretty sure that she was originally buried here.
The next burial William H. Inman, son of
Dr. W.G. and Booker Inman. He died July 19, 1867 and is buried near Mallie E.
Johnson. Dr. Inman was a Baptist
minister and was the 10th pastor of the First Baptist Church of Humboldt from
Nov. 1, 1881 to Dec. 31, 1892. I figure that William H. Inman was originally
buried here.
The next burial is Richard Cross who
died January 15, 1868. Nothing much at all if any is known of Richard Cross.
There are some other Cross' buried near him. On the 1877 Beers Map of Humboldt
you will find the Cross family living near the cemetery, so I assume he was
originally buried here. He is not far from Inman and Johnson.
The next burial is Albert Jones who died
October 11, 1868. Jones opened up a grocery business in Humboldt
after having moved from Newbern. He died soon after having taken up
residence in his new home. Mr. George Sharp Lannom, son of the founder J.N.
Lannom, wrote in his 1932 history of Humboldt as he remembered it from its
earliest times said that this was the first grave in Rose Hill Cemetery. His
stone is still there, but is broken into three pieces.
He is located near Cross,
Inman, and Johnson.
The next burial is Mary J. Transou who
died November 6, 1868. She is the daughter of B.F. and S.A. Transou. B.F.
Transou owned a nursery early in Humboldt's history. He was also a founder of
the Methodist Church in Humboldt, which was organized in 1860 by Rev. Nathan
Sullivan. She is buried under an ancient magnolia tree.(NOTE: Descendants of the
Transou family say that she is the first burial in Rose Hill Cemetery.)
The next burial is David Cornelius
Dickey who died in December 11, 1868. Mr. Nelson Adair Cresap said in his 1927
history of Humboldt that Dickey was either the first or second person buried in
Rose Hill Cemetery. According to Mr. Cresap's history, Dickey was a teacher in
the building that housed the Hopewell Cumberland Presbyterian Church. This
church was near old Shiloh (north of Humboldt). Dickey is buried beside the
Confederate Memorial Garden. He is buried near Eliza J. Scott and James H.
Scales.
The next burial is
Sarah M. P. Seward who died January 10, 1869.
Sarah is the wife of Benjamin Seward who was in the dry goods firm
of Seward, Ferrell, and Scales. Nothing is known about this lady. She is buried
east of James H. Scales.
The next burial is Julia A. Read who
died March 21, 1869. She was the wife of James Mitchell. The Read’s lived in
the southern part of the county, not to far from the cemetery property. (Note: I
believe that this James Mitchell is the same person as Dr. James (Jim) Mitchell.
Mitchell Street in Humboldt is believed to be named for Dr. Mitchell. James is
the son of Dr. P.H. Mitchell of the Edison Community.) Read is buried several
rows northeast of Scales and Seward.
The next burial is James H. Scales who
died in 1869. In my research of this man, I found that he probably died in early
November of 1869, because the Humboldt Lodge No. 202, of F. & A. M., at
their lodge room in Humboldt, on Saturday the 13th of November 1869,
picked a committee to pass suitable resolutions expressive of the feelings of
the Lodge in the lose of their brother James H. Scales. The committee consisted
of Joseph N. Lannom, S.W. Sharp, Moses E. Senter.
James Henry Scales was from Williamson County, Tennessee and moved here
sometime around 1860. Scales was in the firm of Seward, Ferrell, and Scales,
which sold dry goods. The firm consisted of, I believe, Benjamin Seward, Calvin
H. Ferrell, and James H. Scales. (Note: All three of these men and their
families are buried in the same area or lot.) Mr. Ferrell married the daughter of James Scales. But,
James’ daughter Lavinia K. Scales, who married Ferrell, was the daughter of
Elizabeth Peyton Scales. Martha,
whom is buried by James, is his second wife. He is buried southeast of Eliza J.
Scott and northeast of D.C. Dickey.
The next burial is Annie Lee who died
August 9, 1869. She was the daughter of John and Nannie Lee, whom I know little
about. All I have found on John Lee is that he was listed as a grocer in the
1870 census. She is buried directly south of Mary
J. Transou.
The next burial before 1870 is D.F.
McIntosh who died December 30, 1869. McIntosh was one of the first jurors for
the newly established "Humboldt Law Court". It was established in
April of 1869. Little is known about McIntosh. His stone is broken. It is
located right across the road from the Confederate Memorial Garden.
I am stopping my history of early burials in Rose Hill Cemetery with D.F. McIntosh because the cemetery must have been made the “city cemetery” as of about 1870. There are several burials in the early 1870's. I know there are stones that have been gone for many years and were not able to be read, but this is the most complete history of early burials that could be compiled with the records available. There are probably many people buried here that never had a tombstone, but there are no records to tell who they are. They might not have tombstones to mark their final resting place, but their spirits can be felt when you walk upon the sacred grounds of Rose Hill Cemetery.
Started in the Summer of 2000,
Completed December 1, 2000.
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