Seven Star Springs Cemetery - AKA: Hawkins Cemetery?
Barry County, Missouri
Ash Township S27, T25N, R27W
On an old hand drawn map done by Shirley Clevenger this appears to be the
cemetery she called Seven Star Springs
Dane Martin and Gerald Haddock

Gerald Haddock's e-mail address
Directions and possible cemetery name submitted by James Day.
This cemetery is 7-8 miles NW of Washburn. About 1-2 miles south of the intersection of 1010 and 2200 and NE of 1010.
It is on land owned by D. Smith in 1999. There are two houses on the land, one is NW of the other. The cemetery is located up the hill about 1/4 of a mile, behind the NW house. See this map, the red dot is approximately where the cemetery is located, the small black dots are the houses.
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Seven Star Springs Cemetery |
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BARRY
COUNTY, MISSOURI BURIALS
by Gerald Haddock
This project began with the concern which Charles Haddock, Jr. had about keeping
good records at New Site Church, founded in 1848, in the Walnut Grove district
southwest of Monett in Barry County. New Site Church still has the original
church minutes that he wrote by hand to preserve what he could of the details of
the church's history in its early years.
My parents, Hugh and Orpha Haddock, contributed to the record when the published
a family genealogy book, Legends of the Haddock Family, in 1976. They made
several trips from their home in Grants Pass, Oregon, to the 1960's and early
70's visiting Haddock family members and related kin, compiling information
about the extended family. Before they died in 1986 they gave me the remaining
copies of the book and charged me with the responsibility of distributing them
to the extended Haddock family and other interested persons.
Mother's family, Marion Vaughan and descendants, also have a long history in
Barry County. Shortly after the Civil war he took a veteran's grant of the Bear
Wallow Farm at Cross Hollows on Flat Creek, northeast of Cassville. Janice Treat
Vaughan issued a private printing of The Vaughan Family in 2002.
In the summer of 1984 my brother Harold and I drove our parents from Oregon to
Barry and Newton Counties. We spent several weeks visiting family members,
distributing copies of Legends of the Haddock Family, and in the course of
events Harold and I learned much about family history. By 1986 most family
members and friends that they remembered from their youth were dead and buried,
so that entailed visits to many cemeteries. We were distressed to find many
untended and in a sad state of disrepair. Even finding them was difficult.
Harold and I had never lived in Barry County, and my parents' memories were
obscured by more than 50 years of living out of the county. Through the years
even the roads have been moved so to get to many cemeteries it was necessary to
find the back road where they were, or even hike across fields where the road
didn't go there anymore.
I resolved to do something to document cemetery locations, thus began the map I
have been working to produce for several years. Harold's contribution to the
effort is the addition of GPS data to document precise locations. His Senior
Thesis at the U.S. Naval Academy in 1956 was about the concept of establishing
an earth satellite system to provide radio signal location technology for
determining exact locations on the face of the earth. That thesis was impounded
and he never saw it again. It seems he had chosen a subject that already existed
in the concept phase of military development even before the first satellites
were in orbit. In 1956 that was "TOP SECRET" stuff. When GPS became publicly
available he insisted that I purchase the instrument and use it for
documentation of cemetery locations.
The compiled map shows cemetery locations by position on the map; by the
traditional Land Office system of Section, Township and Range; and by GPS
coordinates. More than 250 cemeteries are shown over an area extending from
Berryville, AR at the SE corner of the map, to Neosho at the NW corner. Barry
County alone has more than 130 cemeteries, and there are obscure references to
about 30 more that I still have not managed to locate.
Recently I have begun recording from whatever sources I can find the names of
persons buried in the Barry County cemeteries. This information is being entered
into the genealogy program, The Master Genealogist, in genealogical format so it
will be much more than just a listing of names. Where it can be determined,
genealogic relationships are also entered.
I have no idea how many entries there will eventually be. Already a list of
persons buried in the cemeteries so far recorded can be printed in hard copy.
The plan is to provide such a list for every Barry County cemetery to put into
hard copy book form as well as electronic data base. Thus the project has
turned into much more than giving location of the cemetery.
My wife, Faith, has asked me why I'm doing all this, and as I try to find answer
I think of Charles Haddock's concern that good records be kept, of Hugh and
Orpha Haddock's charge to me to distribute the Haddock information in Legends of
the Haddock Family, and then I come to the commandment in the Bible, "Honor your
father and your mother." Remembering those who have gone before us is essential
to honoring them.
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© 1999 Donna Haddock Cooper, All Rights Reserved