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Houston Cemetery
Lowery / Young Families

The Lowry Cemetery in Decaturville was destroyed, probably in December 2003. This cemetery was in the woods in the southeast quadrant of the intersection of the Decaturville bypass (TN 69) and Middleburg Road (TN 202), behind what was once an antique shop. The cemetery dated to the 1820-1840 period. In 1992 it was possible to recognize about a dozen fieldstones and about an equal number of sunken spots within the Lowry cemetery, so there were about 2 dozen burials there. Given the number of burials, it is likely that this was the local community cemetery before Decaturville Cemetery opened in 1845. Lowry Cemetery probably had already been abandoned when the separate Young Family Cemetery (about 30 yards to the east) was established in 1869. Lowry Cemetery was surrounded by very large trees, 2-3 feet or more in diameter. There was one marker with information, that of Jemima Lowry.

Jemima M. Lowry - Wife of Robert Lowry - Died Sept. 10, 1840 Age 33 Y'rs 11 Mo's 26 Da's. Edwin her son, died Jan. 7, 1838 and her infant son both are lying by her side Erected in honor of their mother by her sons John A., Robt. & Wm. Lowry

Jemima Lowry was the daughter of David Rushing and Nancy Deason. Her mother and two brothers are buried at Campground Cemetery. She has a sister Rebecca Jackson buried at Smith Chapel in Henderson County. Jemima's husband was Robert Lowry, a merchant somewhere in the Decaturville area. (This is a different person from the slave owning planter Robert Lowrey who lived on Doe Creek south of Scotts Hill, see Lowrey Cemetery.) The Lowry's moved to what was then Perry County (now Decatur County) from the Chesterfield District, South Carolina, in the early 1830s. Robert Lowry was in business with his brother-in-law Calvin Rushing. Perry County Court records show them being sued several times. Following his wife's death, Robert Lowry moved to Mississippi.

Jemima's son Robert Lowry, who with his brothers had the marker erected, was a Confederate Brigadier General and Governor of Mississippi 1882-1890.

The marker for Jemima and her sons probably was erected in the 1860s. It was in very good condition right up until it was broken during the logging, probably by a falling tree. Heavy equipment has obliterated all signs of the fieldstones and depressions.

The late Margarett Alexander recorded both cemeteries together in 1976. They appear in Decatur County, Tennessee Cemetery Records under the name of Houston Cemetery. Except for the marker information itself, everything said about Jemima Lowry in the cemetery book is wrong.

The Young Family Cemetery is in the woods southeast of the intersection of the Decaturville Bypass (TN 69) and Middleburg Road (TN 202). The cemetery was established in 1869 about 30 yards east of the older Lowry Cemetery (destroyed in 2003) which had been used in the 1820-1840 period. David Donahue recorded both cemeteries on November 22, 1992. Margarett Alexander recorded both cemeteries March 23, 1976. Her record of the two cemeteries appear under the name Houston Cemetery in Decatur County, Tennessee Cemetery Records published by the Captain Daniel A. Wesson Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Parsons, Tennessee, 1984, pp. 279-280.

NAME BIRTH DEATH SPOUSE PARENTS
GRIFFIN, Allie B. 01 Dec 1872 17 Oct 1921 W.L. Griffin  
YOUNG, Anna M. 27 Sep 1882 20 Jul 1950 James Losson Roberts  
ROBERTS, Elnora Frances 17 Nov 1859 06 Dec 1916 J.P. Houston  
YOUNG, J.P. 27 Jan 1856 30 Dec 1929 Elnora Jane  
Roberts, James Losson 04 Apr 1867 13 Sep 1951 Anna M.  
YOUNG, F.C. 11 Nov 1866 18 Jun 1892    
YOUNG, George M. 11 Nov 1869 19 May 1869   Robert and Penolopa Young
YOUNG, Penelopa 06 Aug 1832 23 Dec 1909 Robert Youjg  
YOUNG, Reuben Thurston 27y 21d 09 Oct 1889   Robert & Penelopa Young
YOUNG, Robert 08 Feb 1820 09 Dec 1878 Penelopa  

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