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 No Flash Focal Length 55 mm
ISO 100 Metering Mode Pattern
Date/Time 2013:09:01 14:16:32 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 1.54
Keywords historical marker Bethesda Cemetery Texas TX cemetery display Historical Site marker sign attraction education information landmark Place of Interest Tourist Destination Travel Destination Bethesda Community Charlie A. Walker Dry Creek graveyard historic marker historic site John G. Leach John Marshall Coalson Parker County 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 Jason O. Watson / historical-markers.org day educate graveyards historic markers historic sites colour image 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 BETHESDA CEMETERY Settlers in the 1860s called this area Dry Creek but renamed it Bethesda Community in 1876 after they built a schoolhouse used for Methodist worship. John G. Leach (1846-1930) and John Marshall Coalson (1826-1897) gave land near the school for a cemetery in 1877 when Leach's daughter Minnie E. (1872-1961) seemed near death with diphtheria. She recovered and the earliest marked grave is that of Charlie A. Walker (1879-1880). Childhood mortality accounts for many graves in the older part of the cemetery. Descendants of pioneer families donated land in 1973 to enlarge the site to five acres. (1978)