Heards Prairie Baptist Church Cemetery

(Also Known As Petteway or Post Oak Cemetery)

Robertson County, Texas

Introduction


Location: From Bremond, take Farm Road 2293 east eight miles to the church-covered pavilion-cemetery complex shown below. From Franklin, take State Road 46 north about four miles to north on Farm Road 979, then northwest on Farm Road 2293 to the cemetery.

George H. and Susannah Lambkin Brantner arrived in Texas about 1851 and are the ascendants of the Texas Brantners. Of their nine children, only two sons had boys to perpetuate the Brantner name in Texas. John Mathious Brantner is responsible for the first East Texas descendants. Ambrose Lee Brantner (my grandfather) migrated to West Texas.

The grave of George H. Brantner has never been located, but he is presumed buried in Montgomery County, Texas. Susannah Brantner is buried in the Ellis Cemetery in Stephens County, Texas.

John Mathious and a large number of his descendants and kindred are buried in the Heards Prairie/Petteway Cemetery.

Ambrose Brantner is buried in the Red Mud Cemetery in Dickens County, Texas.

Heards Prairie Missionary Baptist Church - 1876
JJY048 - Heards Prairie Missionary Baptist Church - 1876
Pencil sketch by unknown artist. Note the double doors, common in early
southern churches. The men and women entered and sat separately.
(Courtesy of Hubert Willis Brantner, via Gerrie Jones Yates)


Petteway Community Cemetery
29_073 - Cemetery and church - 2002


Cemetery entrance Baptist Church sign
CP_01 - Original Entrance Gate 1876 -
JJY045 - Heards Prairie Baptist Church Sign


New Cemetery Entrance Sign
JJY117 - New Entrance Gate - 2005
(Courtesy of Gerrie Jones Yates)

Heards Prairie Baptist Church & Pavilion
JJY024 - Baptist Church and Pavilion - 2005
(Courtesy of Gerrie Jones Yates)

Historic marker - Robertson County
29_045 - Historic Marker - Robertson County
Located in Bremond, Texas

ROBERTSON COUNTY

Settled by people from Tennessee under an 1822 contract held by Sterling Black Robertson (1785-1842), who was later signed the Texas Declaration of Independence. Colony and county were named for him. County was created Dec. 14, 1837, organized March 1838.

County Seats: "Old Franklin," 1838-1850; Wheelock, 1850-1855; Owensville, 1855-1869; Calvert, 1870-1879; Franklin since 1879.

Sent 5 troop companies into Confederate service in Civil War. Established mill to make flour, cotton and wool cloth. Furnished cotton cards, medicines, flour, bacon and salt to soldiers families.


Thanks to Gerrie Jones Yates, a complete listing, with annotated relationships, for the Heards Prairie - Petteway Cemetery is available at
Cemeteries of Texas.

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Family Groups: George H. Brantner John M. Brantner