Duncan Cemetery Section 8, Isabel Township, Fulton Co., Il. is located at the top of a hill on property owned by Chas. Hazzard in 1970, north of Junction US route 136 &34. There are no roads leading to it. so one must walk up the hill. It has been fenced with woven wire fencing. Recorded by Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Gibboney, summer of 1970 & revisited in 1996 by George & Phoebe Drumm.
There is more info in the listings than I put here. Contact the Fulton co. Genealogical Society for their publications for further information on the people buried here. Thanks!
Fulton Co
Historical & Genealogical Society
P. O. Box 583
Canton, IL 61520-0583
send a self addressed stamped envelope for their publication list. their resources would make could documentation of your family history.
|
Surname |
First name or Woman's Maiden |
Date of Birth |
Date of Death |
Other markings ~ Military |
| Duncan | Caroline | 5m old dau of John & Jane | ||
| Duncan | Elizabeth | Dec 21, 1848 | Sept 16, 1849 | dau of Thomas & Laura |
| Duncan | Elizabeth | Scotland | Nov 14, 1864 | 77y6m18d old wife of George |
| Duncan | George | Scotland | Nov 19, 1863 | 73y6m22d |
| Duncan | Harriet | Aug 27, 1854 | Aug 15, 1855 | dau of Thomas & Laura |
| Duncan | Henry | Scotland | Nov 08, 1869 | 77y only top part of stone left. |
| Duncan | Laura | Feb 26, 1826 | May 01, 1850 | wife of Thomas |
| Duncan | Lillian | June 17, 1858 | Nov 17, 1864 | dau of Thomas & Laura |
| Duncan | Thomas P. | 1824 Pa. | Husband of Laura his last resting place is really unknown there is no stone here nor does anyone know if there ever was. | |
| Duncan | William | Sept 24, 1850 | 1y11m16d old son of John & Jane | |
| Lockard | Mary | 1853 | Mar 29, 1887 | wife of Daniel/death record reads buried Duncan. no stone. put on her husband's stone in Freeman cemetery** |
Back to Fulton Co IL Sav Graves Cemetery listings
Excerpt from the History of Fulton County, IL on ---Duncan's Mills is a small place of business with post-office, on section 8 and on Spoon river, deriving its name from the gristmill at that point formerly owned and operated by George Duncan, an early settler here and a very highly respected citizen. From 1840 to 1855 or longer; his was the largest grist-mill within a radius of 15 or 20 miles.