Inscription
Welsh Hills Cemetery was once part of the United States Military Tract given to veterans of the Revolutionary War. The land was owned by a Philadelphia Welshman named Samson Davis. On September 4, 1801, a portion of his land was purchased by the co-founders of the Welsh Hills community, Theophilus Rees and Thomas Philipps, who came from Carmarthenshire, Wales. On February 6, 1808, Theophilus Rees donated a portion of his land for the establishment of this cemetery. On that same day, Rees Thomas, the 8-year-old grandson of Theophilus Rees, became the first person interred. (Continued on other side)
[Side B]: (Continued from other side) Located on this site was the first Welsh Hills Baptist Church, housed in a cabin owned by “Big” David Thomas, the son-in-law of Theophilus Rees. A stone marker denotes the location of the church and lists original members. Theophilus and his wife, Elizabeth, are buried in this cemetery with their descendants and those of Thomas Philipps and other Welsh settler families. One of the most noteworthy Welshmen buried here is Thomas David Jones, a sculptor known for his stone bust of Abraham Lincoln and Vicksburg Memorial located in the Ohio Statehouse. His grave is marked by a simple boulder that he engraved.
Location
Sources
More markers in Licking
The Licking County Courthouse
Newark, OH
Licking County was established in 1808.
Licking County Sheriff’s Residence & Jail
Newark, OH
Designed by J. W. Yost, a renowned Ohio architect, the jail first opened for use in 1889.
The Elias Gilman House / The Wee White House
Granville, OH
The original structure, the central portion of the current house, is the oldest frame building in the village.
An Early Center of Education / Educating Young Women
Granville, OH
Just three weeks after reaching Granville, pioneer villagers decided on December 9, 1805 to build a log cabin where eighty children would...
Pataskala Elementary School
Pataskala, OH
The first school in what is now Pataskala was a “subscription school” operated by Amariah Cubberly on the nearby banks of the South Fork...
