DAVIS-HOLLINGSWORTH CEMETERY
Gulf Park
Estates-East Ocean Springs, Mississippi
LOCATION: Gulf Park Estates Subdivision (Red Bluff area) in the
SE/4 of Section 34, T7S-R8W, Jackson County, Mississippi.
DIRECTIONS: From the intersection of Bienville Boulevard (US
Highway 90) and Washington Avenue at Ocean Springs go SE 6.75 miles
on US 90 to Mississippi Highway 57 at Fontainebleau. Turn right
(South) onto Mississippi Highway 57 and go .50 miles to the Old
Spanish Trail (Old US 90). Go West (right) 2.20 miles to Beach View
Drive at the entrance to Gulf Park Estates. Turn left (South) and
go .35 miles to Blueberry Drive. At Blueberry go West (right) for
.35 miles to North 1st Street. Turn left and go .10
miles to Red Bluff Drive. At Red Bluff Drive go west (right) for
approximately .10 miles to Red Bluff Court (on the right). STOP.
The Davis-Hollingsworth Cemetery is in the wooded lot directly
across the road from the Red Bluff Court street sign. Take a left
(South) on to the dirt road ahead and locate the cemetery in the
woods on the left (East).
HISTORY: The Davis-Hollingsworth Family Cemetery resulted from
Samuel Davis (1769-1831?) who was born in North Carolina. Samuel
Davis and his family came to Jackson County, Mississippi from Burke
County, Georgia in 1812. They had a passport signed by the
Territorial Governor to insure their safe passage through the area
west of the Creek Indian nation. Samuel Davis served with a
regiment of soldiers from Jackson County and fought under General
Andrew Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans in the War of 1812. His
sons, George Davis (1802-1853?) and Samuel Davis II (1804-1879),
were born in Georgia. On February 7, 1829, George D. Davis and
Samuel Davis II purchased Section 34, T7S-R8W for $300 from Pierre
Ladnier (Jackson County, Ms. Land Deed Book 4, pp. 620-621).
The Samuel Davis Family settled here on the east bank of a natural
stream, Bayou Val de Terre. For their occupancy, it was later
called Davis Bayou. At this site, the Davis Family engaged in
farming and shipbuilding for a livelihood. In time, the descendants
of this pioneer family became successful in business and politics in
the Ocean Springs area. Many of the Davis children remained in the
region and married into other pioneer families such as: Bilbo,
Bland, Bradford, Friar, Gottsche, Maxwell, and Weider.
The Tiderwater Baptist Church, the first on the Mississippi Gulf
Coast, was organized in September 1832 by Elder George Davis at the
Davis homestead. Samuel Davis II (1804-1879) married Elvira Ann
Ward (1821-1901) about 1839. This union produced ten children:
Harriet A. Davis Bilbo (1840-1898), George W. Davis (1842-1914),
Sarah Ann Davis (1844-?), Abram James Davis (1849-1921), Eleanor
Davis (1851-1938), Henry Simeon Davis (1853-1917), Sherwood E.
Davis, Elias S. Davis (1859-1925), Belle Davis, and Elvira E. Davis
(1854-1881).
Hollingsworth Family
In
September 1880, John M. Hollingsworth began acquiring land east of
Ocean Springs along the east bank of Davis Bayou, which in the days
of Pierre Ladner who owned this area in the 1820s, was called, Bayou
Val de Terre.
Mr. Hollingsworth bought over one thousand acres from the
Heirs of Samuel Davis, George W. Davis et al, in Section 34, Section
35, and Section 36 of T7S-R8W.(JXCO, Ms. Land Deed Bk. 11, p.
112-114)
It is
very probable that Hollingsworth moved to these lands after the
death of his son, Wyatt, in 1877. The Biloxi Herald of
December 19, 1891, states that Colonel Hollingsworth had a farm here
four miles east of Ocean Springs.
It is
interesting to note that Samuel Davis (1804-1879) was also born at
Georgia.
Could
he and John M. Hollingsworth been childhood acquaintances? The
Davis Family Cemetery is located in the SE/4 of Section 34,
T7S-R8W. It later became known as the Hollingsworth Cemetery when
this family began to bury their loved ones here. John M.
Hollingsworth's remains were probably among the earliest of his
family to have been interred in what properly should be called the
Davis-Hollingsworth Family Cemetery.
This
statement is corroborated when his son, Captain Phil Hollingsworth
(1854-1914), expired on March 11, 1914, The Ocean Springs News
announced that, "the remains being laid to rest in a private
burying ground on the Hollingsworth place, where the other members
of the family are interred".
REGISTER
Davis Family
In memory of W.M. Bilbo
Born Dec. 14, 1821
Died Oct. 8, 1899
The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away. Blessed be the name
of the Lord.
In memory of Hairret (sic Harriet) A. Bilbo
Born August 14, 1840
Died December 12, 1898
Mother thou
hast from us flown
To the heavens
far above
We to the
greet this stone
Consecrated by
our love.
? red
In the memory
Children L.R. & ? Davis
In Loving Memory of
Samuel Davis
Born July 23, 1804
Died 1879
Wife Elvira Ward
Buried in Evergreen Cemetery
Ocean Springs, Mississippi
November 22, 1821
June 14, 1901
Hollingsworth Family(all unmarked)
Ada L.
Hollingsworth 1843 to 7-3-1919)
John M.
Hollingsworth (1814-1891)
Euphemia C. Hollingsworth (1815-1902)
Phillip
Hollingsworth (1852-1914)
John H.
Tillinghast (1869-1924)
Elizabeth Hollingsworth (1848-1910+)
Bilbo Family(all
unmarked)
Samuel
Bilbo
Laura
Havens Bilbo.
REFERENCES:
Ray L.
Bellande, Cemeteries Near Ocean Springs,
Jackson County, Mississippi,
(Bellande: Ocean Springs-1992)
Cyril
E. Cain, Four Centuries on the Pascagoula, Volume II,
(The Reprint Company, Spartanburg, South Carolina, 1983), pp.
165-167.
Regina
Hines, Ocean Springs, 1892, (2nd Edition), (Lewis
Printing Services: Pascagoula, Mississippi-1991), p. 15.
The History of Jackson County, Mississippi, "William
Bradford", (Jackson County Genealogical Society: Pascagoula
- 1989), p. 140.
Personal communication:
J.K.
Lemon-March-1991
John
Oran Tillinghast-
Elton
L. Powell-Bay Minette, Alabama-May 1996
Surveyed by Ray L. Bellande
March 8, 1991
************************************************************************
Table Of
Contents
|