Marker Title: Authon Cemetery
Address: On Garner-Adell Rd, off US 180, about 20 mi. W of Weatherford.
City: Authon
Year Marker Erected: 1981
Marker Location: From Weatherford, take US 180 west about 10.5
miles, turn onto FM 113 about 5.5 miles, turn east onto Authon-Bethesda
Road, (Old Authon Road), continue about 2 miles. Turn south onto Garner-Adell
Road, about .25 mile to cemetery.
Marker Text: Named for the nearby Authon Community, located on
the Fort Worth-Fort Belknap Military Road, this site first served as
a cemetery for the family of Kentucky native Isom Cranfill (1831-1902).
The earliest burial here was that of his 15-year-old son, Linn
Boyd Cranfill (d. 1871), who was killed in an Indian attack
near the family home (.75 mile south). The cemetery and adjoining land
were later deeded to the Authon Church of Christ, who worshiped in a
sanctuary at this site until the 1920s. Still in use, the public burial
ground contains the graves of many pioneer area settlers. (1981)
During 1871, Lynn B. Cranfill, a son of Isom Cranfill, who lived
about twelve miles northwest of Weatherford, went out a few hundred
yards from the house to lead his pony to water. It was about noon,
and he was afoot. When this frontier boy failed to return, somebody
went out to ascertain what had happened. Young Cranfill, who was fourteen
or fifteen years of age, was found scalped near a tank of water.
Note: Author interviewed Sam and James Newberry; Joe Moore; Dole
Miller; and other early citizens of Parker County.
The above story is from the book, The West Texas Frontier, by
Joseph Carroll McConnell.
In the following pages from J.W. Wilbarger's book, Indian Depredations in Texas, the story is slightly different. The Indians hurried away without scalping their victim.
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