Crabapple, TX roadtrip, history, recorded Texas historic landmark, cemetery, photos. (original) (raw)

Crabapple Creek on
Crabapple Cemetery Road
TE Photo, 2001
The Crabapple Community today consists of the church, community building, brush arbor and one other structure. Isolated and off the beaten path, it makes for an excellent picnic spot.

St. John's Lutheran Church c. 1867
TE Photo, 2001
A dirt road just a few yards east of the buildings (marked Crabapple Cemetery Road) takes you (south) across Crabapple Creek and eventually to the isolated hilltop cemetery pictured here. This road should not be attempted if there has been a recent rain.
If driving from Fredericksburg - continuing on East from Crabapple on Eckert Road you will cross Crabapple Creek several more times before reaching the town of
Eckert which is on Hwy 16. Eckert is also a dispersed community with no discernable center.

The Crabapple School
Post office from 1887�1910
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark
National Register of Historic Places in Texas
TE Photo, 2001
Crabapple had a school earlier, but the date for this building is given as 1878. The church - St. John's Lutheran - has the date of 1867 carefully etched in a beveled limestone rock. The post office operated from 1894 to 1910.

St. John Cemetery in Crabapple
TE Photo, 2001
St. John Cemetery
The cemetery has less than 20 graves and consists primarily of just a few families. Although the detailed county map shows a nearby family cemetery with the name of Ottmers - there are several Ottmers buried here as well.

The view from St. John Cemetery
TE Photo, 2001

St. John Cemetery
TE Photo, 2001
The high step to the gate has been shortened by the practical employment of a tombstone as a step. Judging by the date and names - it appears this stone had been replaced with another - so it's not as disrespectful as it first appears. � John Troesser
Gillespie County 1907 postal map showing Crabapple
From Texas state map #2090
Courtesy Texas General Land Office
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