Leagueville
Then and Now
Sept. 13, 2008
A land certificate
that originated in 1848 was patented in 1850 by Aaron
York, surveyor for a league of land in Henderson Co. Tx.
located West of the River Neches on Flat Creek. This area
was referred to as The League and it is
thought ville was added possibly to secure a
post office. The record of Leagueville (formerly
Hopewell) Baptist Church gives the church meeting at the
League School House to organize in 1880. By 1855 the
Sublett family had gained control of the land and sold it
to Matthew Cartwright in 1857. In 1871 B.T. and Annie
(Cartwright) Roberts had acquired rights to the property.
B.T. died in1887 and Annie in 1903. In 1871 the York
heirs sued to regain control of the property but lost on
appeal in 1875. The Roberts deeded three acres for school
purposes in 1884. Research by Historian Judy Jacobson
shows a register of Doctors in the county in 1904 with
Leagueville having two.
The litigation slowed the development of the area and
only became a community in the late 1800s. Burials
had begun on the School property as early as 1863 and it
is thought the school moved across the road in 1901-1902
with the completion of a new building, where it remained
until consolidating with Brownsboro after the 1934-35
school year, transportation making this possible. An
excerpt from the October 11, 1901 Athens Review states
C.I. Hodges returned to Chandler last week, having
been at Leagueville building the new schoolhouse. At the
time the roads were un-paved and practically im-passable
in wet weather.Voluntary help was required to maintain
the roads before the County assumed the responsibility.
F. M. 607 was built in 1946 and F.M.317 in 1950, greatly
improving accessability. Clint Gideon and Buell Taylor
were the first bus drivers. Later ones were Jess
Forrester and Howard Adair, when busses were over-nighted
in the community. 1881-1884 records list Georgia Watkins,
J.A. Hall, and W.H. Whatley as teachers and G.F.
Brownlow, C.G. Hudson, W.R. Murphy, Phelps Smith, and
John Rash, trustees.
A Post Office was established on the 30th of March 1899,
with Wellborn B. Cooper, postmaster, succeeded by John D.
Browning 24th May, 1901, then Orester V. Roberts 2nd May
1906, then Malachiah Reeves 14th July, 1906; discontinued
and closed 28th February 1907. Joe Shelton picked up the
mail and placed it on the train at Brownsboro or
Murchison. At one time there were two general stores,
church, two cotton gins, blacksmith shop and grist-mill;
the latter known to have been operated at one time by
Rial Adair. A broken and discarded millstone remains and
has been placed around the Historical Marker by the
cemetery. The I.A. Barton cotton gin moved to Brownsboro
about 1915 and remained in operation for many years. The
cotton gins were powered by steam and two were said to
have burned. Wes Adair fired the boiler for the last time
in 1915. Access to the Rail Road precipitated the move
and church members moved also and organized First Baptist
Church as an Independent Baptist Church in 1909 as it has
remained to the present. G.L. Parker was a charter member
of both Leagueville and Brownsboro churches.
The blacksmith shop was run by Black Dean and stores were
operated by John Adair, J.D. Browning, Will Cooper, John
I. Hollingsworth, and Vern Massey. Later owners were Dee
Richardson, George Hudnall, Wood McQueen, Garrett Darden,
Alfred Kirkpatrick, Russell Williams, Durward Dingler,
Robert Tillison, Harrison Arnett, Dewey Williams, Doug
Williams, Gip Nichols, Elliout Reagan, Preston Gideon,
Horton Epperson and Jack Poore. The old store building
burned in 1978 and the church bought the property. The
store is now a Kidd-Jones .02 East of the church. In
about 1972 T.C. Moseley and family moved into the area
and set up the only Barber Shop remembered next to the
Store, operated at that time by S.E. Reagan.
The coming of the Rail Road through Brownsboro in the
late 1800s left Leagueville off the beaten path.
Highway 31 was built alongside the railroad and
Leaguevilles hey-day was over. The old deeds call
the road through Leagueville the Athens to Tyler road.
The cemetery was expanded in 1946, 1960, and 1998 and
contains approximately four acres. There are 800 known
graves which include 11 veterans of the Civil War, 7
W.W.1, 46 W.W.2 and 15 Korean, Viet-Nam, and other
conflicts. For many years the grounds were hoed and the
graves mounded up, but because of erosion and time
required in maintenance, mowing was begun in the late 50s
or early 60s. Sam Reagan, grandfather of former
County Judge Winston Reagan, kept the cemetery for many
years and recalled helping dig the first grave with John
Barton and Wes Rounsavall. There are many un-known graves
as well as some possibly un-marked. A Historical Marker
has been placed largely through the efforts of Fran
(Adair) Bethea and the Henderson Co. Historical
Commission. A Memorial Day is observed on 2nd Sunday in
June each year; an article published in the Athens Review
in 1940 shows a crowd estimated at one thousand attending
the Memorial day picnic. This article indicates the first
burial in the cemetery was that of Sid Howell in 1862. A
board of trustees is responsible for the up-keep. The
cemetery was incorporated in 1998. The cemetery was
recently transcribed by Don Adair, grandson of Rial
Adair, and included in the Henderson Co. web-site
directed by . C.L. Gideon compiled a list of
the known veterans and flags are placed and re-placed for
Memorial Day in May and Veterans Day in November by the
Athens Post of the V.F.W. The cemetery maintenance is
funded through donations. During the time of the last
expansion an old Dipping Vat was found. This was used by
the community for tick control in cattle. Some two miles
West a burial site is known to exist on private property
with possibly four graves; an effort by the property
owners has failed to identify those buried there and no
formal record is made.
The church, begun as Hopewell Missionary Baptist
Church of Christ in 1880, remains in the original
location and was preceded by Rock Hill and New York
churches. Charter members were: G.L. Parker and wife,
C.G. Hudson and wife, R.O. Echols and wife, J.M. Echols
and wife, B.B. Mitchell, Texana Echols, S.E. Parker, Ann
Garrett, F.L. Shelton, Susan Lawrence, and M.R. Hopson.
Organized as part of Saline Baptist Assn., forerunner of
the Southern Baptist Convention, chose to become
Independent in 1905 and has remained so to the present
time. The church currently has 200 members on the rolls
with attendance at 150-200. A Parsonage was erected in
1958 and continues in use. With the last addition the
plant contains approximately 20,000 sq. ft. at an
estimated value of $ 1,000,000.00. Tom Bragdon serves as
pastor, with Justin Bragdon as youth pastor and Selman
Parker as music director. In the late 1920s or
early 1930s, a Pentecostal Church was established
with a building in the South-West corner of the Pinkney
Nichols farm. The last known services were conducted by
Rev. Gussie Lemley, Baptist pastor, who according to his
daughter Ruth Lemley Adair Horton, was living in the
Frankston area and was asked to come and preach for the
congregation. When no longer used for worship services
the building was used as a residence by the Lonzo &
Opal Nichols Adair family. The building was eventually
removed and legend has it, was used by the First Assembly
of God Church of Brownsboro. This church was known as
Old Bethel. In July 1897, Jacob and Amanda
Laymance, S.E. Barton and N.A. Johns with an Elder and
Deacon of the Bethel Church in Anderson county, founded
the Liberty Primitive Baptist Church at Leagueville. In
May, 1891, the Liberty church was dissolved and members
united with Mt. Olive Primitive Baptist Church, located
between Leagueville and Brownsboro. Research by Dottie
Parker Lewis shows Friendship Missionary Baptist Church,
located 1 ½ miles South of new Hope moving to
Leagueville in 1890, as the roof of the building was
leaking; they met in the League School house until a
16ft. X 16ft. log building was built (location unknown)
The disposition of this church is not known at this time,
July 14, 2015, by this writer.
Malachiah Reeves, an early settler and Civil War veteran
was well known in the area and served as Postmaster in
1906 and 1907, when it closed. He was licensed to preach
at Leagueville Baptist Church and was the first pastor of
Mt. Zion Baptist Church in Black Jack. He is interred in
Leagueville Cemetery.
By : Wayne Smith
Sources and credits: Henderson Co. School Records,
Handbook of Texas Online, Minutes of Leagueville and
First Baptist of Brownsboro, Leila (Reagan) Browning,
Katrina (Owen) Tillison, R.J. Owen, Dottie (Parker)
Lewis, Wes and Una (Smith) Adair, Leila (Reeves) Eads,
Henderson Co. District Court Records, Blanche (Adair)
Williams, Dot (Smith) Skrobanek, Judy Jacobson, Maynon
Adair Miller..
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