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SANDOVAL
SANDOVAL, TEXAS

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ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH CEMETERY
HISTORICAL MARKER DEDICATION
Sunday May 7, 2006, 10:30 a.m.
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PDF file
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ZION
LUTHERAN CHURCH CEMETERY
HISTORICAL MARKER DEDICATION Sunday May 7, 2006, 10:30 a.m.
WELCOME Claire Maxwell, WHC
INVOCATION Pastor Walter J. Miller
FLAG RAISING/ VFW Post 4009 PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
HISTORY Janet Munroe
UNVEILING OF THE MARKER Terry Miksch Karen Hines
WORDS OF THANKS Marcella Schoener REFRESHMENTS AND FELLOWSHIP
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH CEMETERY
The Sandoval Community was settled by Carl Streich in 1882. The settlement
consisted of German, some Austrian and Swiss, and a few French immigrants.
On March 25, 1893, twenty-six families formally organized Zion Lutheran
Church. The first pastor was J. Rode, and the services were conducted in the
German language.
On September 29, 1894, Paul and Emma Herbst donated one acre of land across
the road from the original church to be used for a church and a cemetery.
This cemetery, located five miles north of Thrall, Texas, on County Road
425, is unfenced and contains eighty-seven known gravesites and ten unknown
gravesites that are marked with white, iron crosses. The oldest documented
gravesite is for Bertha Lehmann, a baby girl who died in 1893. The last
person buried in the cemetery is Kurt Bohlen who died on July 29, 1998.
There are three veterans buried in our cemetery. Two of them served during
World War I: Henry Fuessel died in France, and one is unknown. Erich A.
Schlickeisen served in World War H.
The cemetery still serves as a burial site for the members of Zion Lutheran
Church and their families.
see complete write up
PDF file
view listing of graves site
for
more info click on
Sandoval, Texas
by The Handbook of Texas Online
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www.texasescapes.com
also view
Sandoval Store Old Photos
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