Today, the Evans
Ranch Cemetery has been completely removed,
with the remains of the two buried there being
removed
to the Greenleaf Cemetery, Brownwood, Texas in 2019.
The area where the cemetery was located is again open
land.
Area where C. V. Evans Ranch Cemetery
was located, as it looked in 2019.
Click here to go to C. V. Evans Ranch Cemetery on FindAGrave.
Photographs taken March 29, 2009 - copyright 2009 by Ralph Terry.
Dallas Man Is Found Dead Friday A white male, age 33,
was found dead on a county road between Talpa and Valera
Friday, September 7, at approximately 7:30 a.m. by a
Panther Creek bus driver, who went to the nearest home
and called the Sheriff's Dept.
According to information on the driver's license, the victim was William Evans Snyder and resided in Dallas. IT was determined that he had been shot once inthe chest with what appeared to be a .22 calibre weapon. It is unknown whether or not the wound was the cause of death. Judge Emory Rider ordered an autopsy performed to determine an official ruling of either suicide or homocide. The body was transported to the Institute of Forensic Science at Dallas. (The
Coleman Chronicle and Democrat-Voice, September 11,
1990, page 1.)
|
|
William Evans "Bill" Snyder, 32 William Evans "Bill"
Snyder, 32, of Dallas, formerly of Abilene, died Friday,
September 7, 1990, in Coleman County. Services
were held at 2 p.m. Monday at Elliott-Hamil Funeral Home
Chapel of Memories, Abilene, with Dr. Bill Brister
officiating. Burial was on the C. V. Evans Ranch
in Coleman County.
Mr. Snyder was born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky and moved from Abilene to Dallas in 1985. He graduated from Yorktown High School in Williamsburg, Virginia in 1976 and also from Radford College in Radford, Virginia in 1980. He was a commercial real estate appraiser and a Baptist. Survivors include his mother and stepfather, Fannie and Bill Baker of Abilene; his father and step-mother, Forrest Snyder, Jr. and Lois snyder of Williamsburg, Virginia; a brother, Wesley Snyder of Dallas; a sister, Carol LeMond of Midland; his grandparents, Forrest Snyder of Williamsburg and Mamie King of Austin; and two nieces. Memorials may be made to Hospice of Abilene, P. O. Box 1922, Abilene 79604 or the Serenity House, 141 Mulberry, Abilene 79601. (The
Coleman Chronicle and Democrat-Voice, September 11,
1990.)
|
|
|
|