The cemetery is located northeast of the square on North Lanana Street, a location that was once empressario and Fredonian Rebellion leader Hayden Edwards's land grant. The oldest section of the cemetery lies north of the main gate and was set aside for a cemetery from Hayden Edwards original land grant from the Mexican government. The earliest marked burial in Oak Grove Cemetery is that of Franklin J. Starr who died in 1837. Additional land for Oak Grove Cemetery was purchased in sections. In 1858, Bishop Odin purchased a piece of land for twenty-five dollars from Hayden Edwards and this area was cared for by the Catholic Church.[6] Doctor F.C. Ford deeded the back section of land, which he had acquired from Peyton Edwards, to the City of Nacogdoches. Ford deeded another section of land to the cemetery association in 1902.
Oak Grove Cemetery did not receive its current name until 1900 when a group of "civic minded women" formed the cemetery association. The cemetery association lasted fifty years when in 1950 the association deeded the cemetery over to the City of Nacogdoches. After the association disbanded, all of its records were lost. There are no written records of burials prior to when the city took ownership of the cemetery in 1950. The only information that can be gleaned about burials in the early years of the cemetery comes from the grave markers. However, a study of the history of cemeteries in American society allows one to place the early founding and subsequent changes of Oak Grove in their historic context.
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