On Bourland Road south of Bancroft Road, on the right when traveling south.
Aurelius Delphus Bourland (1840-1904), a North Carolina native and a veteran of the Civil War, bought land here in 1873. A farmer and Primitive Baptist preacher, he first used this site as a family cemetery. The earliest marked grave is that of . . . — — Map (db m171411) HM
On Lorine Street at College Avenue, on the left when traveling west on Lorine Street.
Founded in 1882 as the Keller Baptist Church, this church was started by twenty former members of Mt. Gilead Baptist Church soon after rail lines reached the area. Early meetings were held in a schoolhouse and then in the Union Church Building. The . . . — — Map (db m238076) HM
On Bear Creek Park Road at Bear Creek Parkway, on the right when traveling south on Bear Creek Park Road.
After Texas & Pacific Railroad came through this area, H.W. Wood, a druggist, set aside 40 acres on July 19, 1881, for this townsite. He named the new village "Athol". Within a year, the name became "Keller", honoring John C. Keller, railroad . . . — — Map (db m238077) HM
On Johnson Road at Johnson Court, on the right when traveling west on Johnson Road.
From 1886, the Christian denominations of Keller and other areas shared their facilities. Pastor W.K. Simpson served the area when the Keller Methodist Church was organized in 1897. In 1913 the church erected its own building; by 1946, the Rev. R.V. . . . — — Map (db m227554) HM
The earliest religious meetings here began in the late 1840s as part of Lonesome Dove Baptist Church. The Mt. Gilead Congregation was chartered in 1850 under the direction of the Rev. John Allen Freeman (1821-1919) with 8 members, including 2 . . . — — Map (db m188449) HM
On Bancroft Road west of Ottinger Road, on the right when traveling west.
This burial ground originally served a pioneer settlement of related families who migrated to the area from Missouri in 1847 as members of the Peters Colony. They were headed by a widow, Permelia Allen (d. 1866), who is buried here in an unmarked . . . — — Map (db m183274) HM
On Ottinger Road west of Manor Way, on the right when traveling west.
Scattered throughout many of the pioneer cemeteries in Texas are unusual stone structurers, or burial cairns, built by the early settlers to memorialize their dead. Primarily surface structures of native stone, the cairns vary in design and . . . — — Map (db m170847) HM