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Sunday, November 2, 2025 at 2:00 AM
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Annual meeting for Osage Community Cemetery Association set Nov. 2

Annual meeting for Osage Community Cemetery Association set Nov. 2

Osage was once a thriving community with three churches, two schools, a cotton gin, store and post office. Its residents made their living as plantation owners, farmers, carpente rs, blacksmiths, and teachers. There was even a shoemaker, brick mason, gunsmith, well digger and surgeon living in Osage and the area along Harvey’s Creek. There were an Osage Masonic Lodge and a debating club. However, when the railway was laid out several miles to the south, Osage lost much of its population to Weimar.

Today, the Osage Community Cemetery is one of the last reminders of the once thriving community. Unlike many other rural communities in Colorado and Fayette Counties with predominantly German or Czech populations, the Osage area was settled mostly by Southerners. A Weimar resident once referred to the Osage Cemetery as “that English cemetery,” meaning most people buried there have British roots. There are numerous graves of people related to the McMi l lan, Burford, Moore, York, Shaw, Taylor, Goode and Wilson families, as well as many others.

Located at the junction of County Roads 205 and 208, the cemetery contains about two hundred graves which are maintained by the Osage Communit y Cemetery, Inc. The annual meeting for this non-profit organization wi l l be held at the cemetery on Sunday, November 2nd at 2 p.m. Everyone is welcome, but please bring a chair.

If you are unable to attend but would like to support the cemetery association’s work, tax deductible donations may be made to Osage Community Cemetery, Inc., P. O. Box 623, Columbus, Texas 78934. For other methods of donating or more information about the cemetery and association, visit www.osagecemetery. com or contact Rox Ann Johnson at 512-9254804 or email roxannjohnson@ me.com.

This photo of an Osage Camp Meeting on March 15, 1912, is just one of numerous historical photos in A Good Place to Rest: A History of the Osage Community Cemetery and Early Harvey’s Creek Settlers, first printed in 2018 as a fundraiser for the cemetery association.

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