Mount Olive Cemetery Cusseta Georgia

Mount Olive Cemetery
Mount Olive Cemetery
gate to King family plot
gate to King family plot
fenced around King family plot
fence around King family plot
front view of King family plot
front view of King family plot
three brothers
three brothers
Garry Wood and Catherine Alice King
Garry Wood and Catherine Alice King

Mount Olive Cemetery is located at the corner of Henry Street and Wynn Street in Cusseta, Georgia. There is a large King family plot located in this cemetery. It is surrounded by a rusted wrought iron fence, and the gate has the name King overlaid.

This is an old and picturesque cemetery, well worth a visit. Garry Wood and Catherine Alice King have a large monument in this section, and many of their children and grandchildren are buried here. Many more Kings and members of related families are buried throughout the cemetery.

King Cemetery #27 Fort Benning Georgia

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King Cemetery #27
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peaceful surroundings
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Henry King and Elizabeth Lee
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no legible inscription

 

 

King Cemetery #27 is located on Fort Benning, near Columbus, Georgia at 32°21’53.5″N 84°46’41.8″W. It is situated in their firing range, but you can contact the military installation and they will escort you to the cemetery. The drive to it will take you past Kings Pond and Upper Kings Pond, where Henry King had a water powered mill, through tall soaring pine trees. There are no signs of the many buildings and houses that used to be in the area.

Henry King died before the coming of Fort Benning, but his children sold their land to the government and the area that was the King Plantation is now used for military training exercises. This is a huge open wooded area, peaceful and quiet and seemingly untouched but for dirt roads as far as the eye can see.

The cemetery itself is maintained by the military, and sits atop a hill affording a magnificent view of the peaceful surroundings. There are four visible gravesites here; Henry King and Elizabeth King (nee Elizabeth Lee) have legible granite ledger stones, although they are worn and cracked. There is one unmarked grave next to them, and then a marble ledger stone with no legible inscription. This is very likely the gravesite of Jesse Stephen King, their youngest son who died in the Civil War.

Family stories tell that after Jesse’s death (from wounds at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain) his body was returned to the family. His mother dressed him in his uniform and buried him beneath an apple tree. Her heart was so broken by the death of her youngest child that she died a few years later, many years before her husband.

But come, we are too gay. What is it that glistens so white among the shrubbery of yonder high hill, past the woods, through the hollow, upon that lofty hill?

There they sleep, the young and the old, in neat rows, a stone at the foot and one at the head, waiting till Judgment Day.

Why is it so quiet there? Why do the winds sigh so mournfully? Why is it chilly there even in the sunlight?

There they sleep, like two giants at rest, with little ones around them—Henry King and his wife, Elizabeth Lee.

-Mrs. Mary Williamson Miller, from History of Chattahoochee County, Georgia by N. K. Rogers

 

Elizabeth King Headstone

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ledger stone of Elizabeth King
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lower section of inscription
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upper section of inscription

The ledger stone of Elizabeth “Betsy” King (nee Elizabeth Lee) is located in King Cemetery #27 in Fort Benning, Georgia. The inscription reads:

In memory of

Elizabeth King

daughter of

John & Mary Lee

born

July 8th 1795

died

Oct 29th 1866

Aged 71 years 3 months and 21 days

Here sleeps one who we all loved;

Yet when death came to summon her home

She had to impart the last kiss

And her soul took its flight on high

To meet her Saviour and friends.