THE OSCAR HOPE CEMETERY
By Robert Cargill, Jr.
(a great-great-grandson of Oscar Hope)
April 19, 2006
The Oscar Hope Cemetery sits near the northwest corner
of a 1000-acre tract purchased by Oscar Hope in 1845 near
Caddo Lake. The cemetery and Hope’s home were between
Port Caddo and what is now Karnack in northeast Harrison
County, in what was then The Republic of Texas. Oscar Hope
was buried here in 1848, and the cemetery now contains 67
graves of his descendants and neighbors, including the Moore
and Baker families. The most recent burial was that of Betty
Moore Ward on August 10, 2002.
A group of Oscar Hope’s descendants established the
Oscar Hope Cemetery Association, Inc. for the purpose of
acquiring and maintaining this historic cemetery. We obtained
title to the cemetery in 2001 from the heirs of T. J. Taylor
who had bought the Hope lands and surrounding tracts in
1940 and had conveyed some 3600 acres to the U.S. Government
in 1941 for the Longhorn Army Ammunition Plant.
A brief history of the cemetery and its occupants follows.
Brief Notes on the Individuals Buried in the Oscar Hope
Cemetery
The Hopes
Oscar Hope, his wife Rebecca (Perkins) and three children,
sons Adam and Alonzo, and daughter Elizabeth, left their
home in Benton, Yazoo County, Mississippi and headed for
East Texas. They were a prosperous family in early 1845
when Oscar was 36 and Rebecca was 30. They purchased two
steamboats in New Orleans (Why two boats?) on which the
family of five, and presumably a number of Negro slaves,
made their way up the Red River, Twelve Mile Bayou, and
the Cypress Bayou to Port Caddo, by then a major port along
the way between New Orleans and Jefferson. The Hopes had
arrived at their destination by early March as is evidenced
by a letter addressed to Oscar Hope in Port Caddo dated
March 17, 1845 from a W. Dorsey of Yazoo City, Mississippi.
On June 11, 1845 Hope purchased 1000 acres of land for
$2000 from Henry Martin, the original grantee of 12,112,845
square varas (2146 acres) from the Republic of Texas. On
this site he constructed an 8-room house from large pine
logs hewn on his newly acquired land, and fastened together
with wooden pegs. Rebecca bought a spiral staircase in New
Orleans and brought it home to Port Caddo and had it installed
in her new home.
As the house was being constructed, a second daughter,
Annie Rebecca, was born on January 5, 1847. In late summer
1848 Rebecca, along with little Annie went to the home of
her parents, the Reverend Isaac and Hannah Perkins, in Mine
Creek (now Nashville) in Hempstead County, Arkansas, where
on October 22 she gave birth to her fifth child, Oscar,
Jr. During Rebecca’s absence, her husband contracted
pneumonia and died on September 30, just 23 days before
the birth of his last child. During this last illness Hope’s
friends and neighbors, James and Annie McCathern, cared
for him, and eventually buried him in a plot near the northwest
corner of his land, the first burial in what is now known
as the Oscar Hope Cemetery. The McCathern’s daughter
Annie Eliza would eventually marry the youngest Hope son,
Oscar Jr.
Oscar Hope descended from a long line of influential ancestors.
His father Adam Hope had been an officer in Andrew Jackson’s
army during the War of 1812. His maternal grandfather Lardner
Clark is described in the Tennessee Historical Journal of
1917 as “Nashville’s First Merchant and Leading
Citizen” and he was a cofounder of Peabody College.
Lardner Clark, a graduate of Princeton in 1775, his brother
Elisha, his brother-in-law James van Uxem (also Vanuxem),
and his father Elijah Clark, were privateers during the
American Revolution.
Oscar’s wife Rebecca Ann Perkins was the daughter
of Reverend Isaac Cooper Perkins, a Baptist preacher who
founded the town of Mine Creek – now Nashville- Arkansas
in 1836, the Baptist Church there, and presided at the founding
of the Arkansas Baptist Convention in 1848. Rebecca was
a plain-looking woman but clearly a good businesswoman.
She managed the Hope plantation from the time of Oscar’s
death in 1848 until after the Civil War. Receipts from several
merchants in New Orleans reveal that she regularly purchased
large amounts of supplies and had them shipped by steamer
to Port Caddo. She and her sons warehoused and shipped cotton
from Port Caddo to New Orleans, and oral history says that
she owned one or more steamboats that plied the run between
New Orleans and Jefferson.
Oscar and Rebecca Hope are the patriarch and matriarch
of the Hope family in East Texas and the couple around which
the subject cemetery is organized. Rebecca died in 1888,
after the deaths of her son Adam (in 1868, eventually of
wounds received in the Civil War), her daughter Elizabeth
(in 1862, of complication of childbirth), her granddaughter
Elizabeth Coleman (in 1865, at age two), and just before
the death of an infant child born to Oscar Jr and wife Annie
Eliza. All of these named descendants of Oscar and Rebecca
are buried in the Oscar Hope Cemetery except Adam, who was
buried somewhere along the journey from Little River, Arkansas
to Port Caddo by his widow.
Aside from these named individuals only three others were
buried here until 1900. These three were friends and neighbors,
but not relatives of the Hopes and will be mentioned with
their respective families.
Oscar Hope, Jr and his wife Annie Eliza (McCathern) maintained
the original Hope Plantation and resided there until Oscar’s
death in 1924. In addition to operating the family farm,
Oscar served from 1885 until 1898 as Clerk of the Border
Baptist Church, a church founded in 1843 at the village
of Border, a mile or so northeast of the present site of
Jonesville, and some 15 miles southeast from Port Caddo.
The original church records are preserved and are cared
for by Mrs Virginia Summers of Karnack. Oscar was the local
educator; he held school for the white children for half
a day and for the Negro children the other half. His daughter
Mary Atelia, having been schooled only by her father, attended
and graduated from the Sam Houston State Normal School (now
Sam Houston State University) in 1899. Oscar and his brother
A P (for Alonzo Perkins) helped establish property law when
they and several partners filed a lawsuit that resulted
in an appellate court decision that lands created by the
removal of the Red River Raft and the resulting lowering
of Caddo Lake did not belong to the original grantee (whose
title extended to the original lakeshore) but rather to
the state. Thus the plaintiffs were awarded some 1700 acres
of newly created lands. The town of Uncertain, Texas stands
on land granted under this suit to Oscar Hope. Oscar and
Annie lie buried near his parents.
Ruby Alice, a daughter of Oscar and Annie Eliza, died in
1903 at the age of 21, and is interred along with the Hope
family, and is the only one of her generation buried in
the family plot who attained adulthood. (Two of Ruby’s
infant sisters were buried here in 1888 and 1900,)
The last two Hopes buried here were Oscar Carlisle Hope,
Jr (1982) and his son Robert William Hope (1981). O C, Jr
was a member of General George S Patton’s staff in
the European Theatre of World War II, and a highly respected
officer. Robert met an untimely death as a young man.
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