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The Battle of Parker's Crossroads - Tour Stop 4 - Jones Cemetery and the Old Dug Well
on the access road to the Old Jones Cemetery beside a parking strip for about 10 cars, Wildersville,
TN ,
USA
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Tennessee State Historical Marker |
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The Battle of Parker's Crossroads Tour Stop 4 ? Jones Cemetery and the Old Dug Well ? As the battle moved from Hicks Field through the crossroads, Forrest's troops began to move east, roughly along the Wildersville Road. Here, near Jones Cemetery, Confederate soldiers watered their horses and filled their canteens at an old dug well, located in front of this marker. In Jones Cemetery are the graves of the Reverend John A. Parker and his wife Rebecca. Their graves lie north and south, while all others lie east and west. According to the family history of Tom Parker, great great grandson of John Parker, and noted in the Official Records, the Reverend was angered when Union cannon were emplaced in his yard, thus inviting Confederate counter-battery fire. He had been a Unionist, but became further incensed at the Union battery commander's refusal to move, and so swung his allegiance to the Confederacy. When Parker died in 1864, his death-bed wish was to be buried with my feet to the north - my head to the south, so that when the angel Gabriel sounded his trumpet, I can rise and kick the Yankees back North! Parker's Crossroads Battlefield Association.
Last updated: 2/14/2015 15:17:00 |
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Related Themes: C.S.A., Confederate States of America, Confederacy, Union, Tennessee Cemetery Markers, Cemeteries, TN Graveyards, Burial Grounds and Graves Explore other historical Tennessee Cemeteries. View other Tennessee Civil War Historical Markers |
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