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This is a record of all the cemeteries (not burials).
This is a record of burials, cemetery by cemetery.
This is a record of burials for one cemetery.
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| Bramlette, Nannie A. 153925 |
| Birth: NOT KNOWN
Death: 06/02/1901
Marriage:
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| Cemetery: Evergreen (UNMARKED) |
| Record Source: Rodgers and Wade Furniture Co., Researcher-Submitted Info |
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Update info
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If you copy this information, please cite this as your source:
Betsy Mills and Ron Brothers. The Death and Cemetery Records of Lamar County, Texas, ReBroMa Press, 2008, http://www.lamarcountytx.org/cemetery. (12/17/2025)
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Notes
From Rodgers and Wade Furniture Co. Funeral Records in possession of Fry and Gibbs Funeral Home, Book #3, p. 35: Service #69; Mrs. Nannie A. Bramlette; Date of Funeral 3 Jun 1901; place of death, Bonham, TX.; married; color White; place of services, Evergreen Cemetery; name of Clergyman, J. A. Black, Bonham, TX; ordered by William Bramlette, Jr.; address Bonham, TX; carriages, 2 plus PB; open grave; Box to Cemetery and lining; Funeral notices.
THE BONHAM NEWS, Friday June 7, 1901: “Mrs. Nanna A. Bramlette, wife of Judge Wm. Bramlette, Sr., died at her home near Ravenna on Saturday morning, June 2, 1901, about 9 o’clock. Her death was very sudden, having been apparently in her usual health only a few minutes before she was stricken with heart failure or apoplexy, and dying in a few minutes. She was married to Judge Wm. Bramlette in Austin in Nov. 1885; and beside her husband she left surviving her two sons, Rev. A. E. Smith of Abilene, and E. G. Genter, Esq., of Dallas, Texas, both of whom attended her funeral at Paris, Texas, where she was buried on Monday afternoon, June 3. Mrs. Bramlette, from her early childhood had been a true and devoted member of the Methodist church and her Christian virtues and charity has ever marked the path of her live, and left the imprint of the noble Christian character and follower of Him that died for mankind. Many sorrowing friends attended the procession to the T.&P. deport on Monday at noon when her body was shipped to Paris for burial at the Evergreen cemetery in that city. The sympathy of the entire community is extended to the honored and vulnerable husband that survives her, and to the other relatives. May the Hand that doeth all things well be gently laid on the surviving husband and family.” Submitted by Craig McDonald.
Sexton records of Evergreen have no indication of this burial. There is a William Bramlette in Block J-02SE without an interment date.
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