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Harrison Cemetery Traditional Geocache

This cache has been archived.

Vertighost: Since there has been no response by the cache owner within the time frame requested in the last reviewer note, I have archived this cache. Please note that caches that have been archived for maintenance issues or lack of cache owner communication are not eligible to be unarchived.

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Hidden : 2/1/2007
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   small (small)

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Geocache Description:

You are looking for a small container.
It should be a fairly easy find.
Could be considered a "Park n Grab" if there was any convenient parking.
Original contents included five $1 golden coins for the FTF and a few small trade items.
BYOP


This cache is located at the site of Harrison Cemetery in East Fort Worth. Many original settlers of East Fort Worth have come to their final resting place here. It is registered as a historical site by the Texas Historical Commission. Sadly, it has not been kept up well in the past years although it was mowed at least once in 2006 and a lot of overgrowth (especially briars) was removed. I found this reference to the cemetery:

The following information was extracted from an article titled "Police, neighbors clean up historic Tarrant cemetery", which appeared in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Saturday, October 12, 1996, Section B, page 1 & page 8

"The grave of [J. C.] Randol, who died in 1894, and the rest of the old Harrison Cemetery where he is buried......The cemetery is 125 years old and no one has been buried there for decades. Tarrant County pioneer D. C. Harrison bought the land for his family, according to the records of the Historic Preservation Council of Tarrant County. Mary E. Harrison, who lived from 1864 to 1871, occupies the oldest grave. R. A. Randol, who operated a gristmill in what is now east Fort Worth from 1857 to 1916, bought the cemetery in 1895. Members of the Randol and Harrison families intermarried. Randol's first wife, Ronda; and his brother, J. C. Randol, are buried in the cemetery with about 60 other people.....Even with the land cleared, it still might be hard to identify Harrison as a cemetery if not for the graves of J. C. Randol and Confederate veteran Edward D. Tracy. The two graves are among the few with gravestones. Most of the other stones are gone, knocked over or eroded....."

The Cemetery is located south of Interstate 30 on the Eastside of Fort Worth in the area known as Meadowbrook, near the intersection of Meadowbrook Road and Medlock Drive, the Bentley Square apartment complex is located nearby.

The historical marker reads:

When first used, this one-acre cemetery belonged to Tarrant County pioneer D.C. Harrison. The earliest known grave is that of Mary E. Harrison (1864-71). Several early settlers used this site, including R.A. Randol (1850-1922), the operator of Randol Mill, who bought this tract in 1895 and deeded it forever as a burial ground. Graves here number about sixty and include those of the Edward Deason Family, Randol's first wife Ronda (Harrison) (1859-82), his brother John C. Randol, who died in an 1894 mill accident, and Nancy Cannon Harrison (1833-83), mother of Ronda Harrison Randol. (1982)

While you are there, take a short trip south on Meadowbrook Drive and check out all the fancy homes !!!

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

onfr bs gerr

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)