Photo detail

Camera Maker Canon Camera Model Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III
Aperture f/8 Exposure Value 0 EV
Exposure Program Manual Exposure Time 1/250 sec
Flash Compulsory Flash Focal Length 70 mm
ISO 400 Metering Mode Pattern
Date/Time 2013:09:03 10:24:58 Copyright © 2013 Jason O. Watson. All rights reserved.
Resolution Unit Inch X Resolution 240 dots per ResolutionUnit
Y Resolution 240 dots per ResolutionUnit Compression Jpeg Compression
Exposure Mode 1 Subject Distance 3.19
Keywords Johnsville Cemetery historical marker Texas TX cemetery display Historical Site marker sign attraction education information landmark Place of Interest Tourist Destination Travel Destination Erath County graveyard historic marker historic site John Z. Martin Johnsville signage attractive destination educating info tourist attraction United States gravestone history no people text appealing tourism travel United States of America grave stone historic nobody word attract cemeteries daytime displays historical markers markers signs South color image historical landmarks outdoor tombstone vertical appeal day educate graveyards historic markers historic sites colour image Jason O. Watson / historical-markers.org destinations headstone outside tourist attractions day time gravestones grave day-time grave stones US words death color images daylight outdoors tombstones USA verticals colour images headstones natural light outsides U.S. graves U.S.A. deaths sign with text Caption JOHNSVILLE CEMETERY The community of Johnsville, settled before 1860, was named for John Z. Martin when he was appointed first postmaster in 1901. Once a thriving village on the main road from Stephenville to Glen Rose, Johnsville consisted of general stores, a cotton gin, blacksmith shop, fraternal lodges, a school, a church, and numerous homes. The oldest graves in Johnsville Cemetery are those of the two infant children of Curtis and Annie (Cox) Burks and of W. B. and Mary (Smith) Cox. The children are believed to have died in 1907 and 1910. In 1910 Edward and Martha (Shaw) Cox sold 1.5 acres of land adjoining the Christian church for use as a cemetery. The church was then almost fifteen years old. Pioneers from all walks of life settled in the area; teachers, Masons, blacksmiths, merchants, soldiers, preachers, farmers, mothers, fathers, children, and many others created the community known as Johnsville. Many of them and their descendants were interred here in the Johnsville Cemetery. In 1948 the Johnsville School was consolidated with schools in Pony Creek and Chalk Mountain to form the Three Way School District. By 1997, only the Church of Christ (formerly called the Christian Church) and the cemetery remained as a record of the area's pioneer settlement. The Johnsville Cemetery continues to serve the area. (1998)