Bryant Cemetery, Saline County, AR
Dec. 28th, 2011 11:11 amThe Battle of Hurricane Creek
After the fall of Little Rock to Union forces in September 1863, the area immediately south of the Arkansas River became a No Man's Land. On the morning of October 23, 1864, a Federal detachment of the 7th Army Corps, returning to Little Rock after raiding the Confederate arsenal at Princeton, was engaged by Logan's 11th Arkansas Cavalry, CSA, at a point one mile southeast of this spot. The ensuing battle was fought at the Hurricane Creek Crossing of the old Camden Road and resulted in 28 men killed, 11 wounded and one captured.


After the fall of Little Rock to Union forces in September 1863, the area immediately south of the Arkansas River became a No Man's Land. On the morning of October 23, 1864, a Federal detachment of the 7th Army Corps, returning to Little Rock after raiding the Confederate arsenal at Princeton, was engaged by Logan's 11th Arkansas Cavalry, CSA, at a point one mile southeast of this spot. The ensuing battle was fought at the Hurricane Creek Crossing of the old Camden Road and resulted in 28 men killed, 11 wounded and one captured.


Pinecrest Cemetery, Bryant, Saline Co., AR
Nov. 4th, 2011 06:32 pmLast weekend, I went through Pinecrest, hoping to photograph my uncle's gravestone, but it has not yet been set.
I love the little lake.

Where there's water, there are geese. At first, they were happy to pose, but when I stood up beside the car, not so much...

The statue that marks the entrance to Babyland...

Babyland decorated for fall...

The Veterans' Annex...

Pinecrest is now part of a corporate cemetery conglomeration, with the usual rules to limit liability, like no glass flower vases, etc. I was glad to see that corporate mentality had not stripped all individuality from graveside displays, as I drove by and noticed these windchimes.

I love the little lake.

Where there's water, there are geese. At first, they were happy to pose, but when I stood up beside the car, not so much...

The statue that marks the entrance to Babyland...

Babyland decorated for fall...

The Veterans' Annex...

Pinecrest is now part of a corporate cemetery conglomeration, with the usual rules to limit liability, like no glass flower vases, etc. I was glad to see that corporate mentality had not stripped all individuality from graveside displays, as I drove by and noticed these windchimes.

The graves on the side of the road...
Aug. 24th, 2011 05:19 pmThree years ago, my youngest sister asked me if I knew about the graves on the side of the road. She and her son had seen them as they drove down Arkansas Highway 5 in Saline County to run errands in a growing town that has almost swallowed up the countryside.
Naturally, I went to go check them out.
The remains of a family cemetery. . . the family was the Paisley and Elizabeth Kirkpatrick family, originally from North Carolina.
The graves are less than fifty yards off the highway. There were five graves with markers, and orange flags that looked as if they marked three more graves without stones, one heartbreakingly small.
The graves must have been found by heavy equipment operators moving earth to create the parking lot you can see at the top of the photo.
Paisley and Elizabeth Allen Kirkpatrick married on March 12, 1833 in Orange County, North Carolina. Six of their seven children were born in North Carolina before they moved to Saline County, Arkansas between 1847 and 1852 to farm several hundred acres there.
Their last child, Elizabeth C Kirkpatrick was born not quite two months after her father died on August 17, 1852.
Hannah Kirkpatrick, the second oldest of the Kirkpatrick girls, married Ambrose Thompson in 1856, and the couple helped Hannah's widowed mother keep the farm going. Hannah and her husband had a daughter, Serepta, born in 1857.
Serepta was just a toddler when she lost her mother.
I found Serepta twice in the 1860 census. She was listed living with Hannah and Ambrose Thompson on July 7, 1860, the day her mother died. Then, five days later, the grieving Ambrose Thompson must have gone to his parents' home in Pulaski County with his young daughter, because they are listed on the census there, taken on July 12, 1860. That's the last time Serepta Thompson can be found on a US census. It makes me wonder if the tiny little grave marked with orange flags is hers. . .
Lemuel Kirkpatrick, fourth child of Elizabeth and Paisley, enlisted in Company E, First Arkansas Infantry, Confederate States Army in April, 1861. He was mustered into service three weeks later at Lynchburg, VA, and was mortally wounded on December 31, 1862 at Murphreesboro, TN.
I found this marker at the foot of Elizabeth Kirkpatrick's grave and puzzled over it. . . EKM? Was this yet another grave?
It wasn't. It was the footstone for Elizabeth Allen Kirkpatrick Medford, who married John Medford in 1861, and died in 1862.
The Bryant Historical Society took on the restoration of this family cemetery, and is working on securing its designation as a pioneer cemetery.
I took these photos today.

Paisley Kirkpatrick

Lemuel Kirkpatrick

Elizabeth C Kirkpatrick

Hannah Kirkpatrick Thompson

Elizabeth Allen Kirkpatrick Medford

Family cemetery partially restored

View from the road, August 2011
Thanks to the Bryant Historical Society, this family cemetery won't be lost to nature...
Naturally, I went to go check them out.
The remains of a family cemetery. . . the family was the Paisley and Elizabeth Kirkpatrick family, originally from North Carolina.
The graves are less than fifty yards off the highway. There were five graves with markers, and orange flags that looked as if they marked three more graves without stones, one heartbreakingly small.
The graves must have been found by heavy equipment operators moving earth to create the parking lot you can see at the top of the photo.
Paisley and Elizabeth Allen Kirkpatrick married on March 12, 1833 in Orange County, North Carolina. Six of their seven children were born in North Carolina before they moved to Saline County, Arkansas between 1847 and 1852 to farm several hundred acres there.
Their last child, Elizabeth C Kirkpatrick was born not quite two months after her father died on August 17, 1852.
Hannah Kirkpatrick, the second oldest of the Kirkpatrick girls, married Ambrose Thompson in 1856, and the couple helped Hannah's widowed mother keep the farm going. Hannah and her husband had a daughter, Serepta, born in 1857.
Serepta was just a toddler when she lost her mother.
I found Serepta twice in the 1860 census. She was listed living with Hannah and Ambrose Thompson on July 7, 1860, the day her mother died. Then, five days later, the grieving Ambrose Thompson must have gone to his parents' home in Pulaski County with his young daughter, because they are listed on the census there, taken on July 12, 1860. That's the last time Serepta Thompson can be found on a US census. It makes me wonder if the tiny little grave marked with orange flags is hers. . .
Lemuel Kirkpatrick, fourth child of Elizabeth and Paisley, enlisted in Company E, First Arkansas Infantry, Confederate States Army in April, 1861. He was mustered into service three weeks later at Lynchburg, VA, and was mortally wounded on December 31, 1862 at Murphreesboro, TN.
I found this marker at the foot of Elizabeth Kirkpatrick's grave and puzzled over it. . . EKM? Was this yet another grave?
It wasn't. It was the footstone for Elizabeth Allen Kirkpatrick Medford, who married John Medford in 1861, and died in 1862.
The Bryant Historical Society took on the restoration of this family cemetery, and is working on securing its designation as a pioneer cemetery.
I took these photos today.

Paisley Kirkpatrick

Lemuel Kirkpatrick

Elizabeth C Kirkpatrick

Hannah Kirkpatrick Thompson

Elizabeth Allen Kirkpatrick Medford

Family cemetery partially restored

View from the road, August 2011
Thanks to the Bryant Historical Society, this family cemetery won't be lost to nature...





