Submitted by: Troy Everett Email: troyeverett@msn.com I was born and raised in the Crossroads community near FM31 and CR2199. My great-great grandfather was Robert Burton Everitt. He came to the area near the Blocker community from Jackson Parish, Louisiana about 1868 after he and two of his sons, William James Everitt (my great grandfather) and his brother, Joseph Everitt, fought in the Civil War. I don't know all of their service, but I'm reasonably sure they were in the Battle of Mansfield, Louisiana. All three survived the war. After working some for a short time for Henry Ware who had married Robert's sister, Martha Ann, and preceded him to East Texas, Robert bought land from the old Lucinda Wallace survey at Crossroads and built a two story handhewn log home with handmade brick chimneys and four firplaces. It was covered on the inside and outside with 1 X 10 boards. You could not tell that it was a log house by looking at it. The roof was covered by handsplit shingles. It was built by ex-slaves who chose to follow the family from Louisiana to Texas after their emancipation. Robert and Jim, as my great grandfather was called, were good to them and since they didn't have anywhere else to go, they stayed with the family. The old home was on what is now my part of the old home place. The house is now gone but stood until the late 1950's when my father , A. B. "Pete" Everett, gave away the logs, lumber, and bricks. It was in need of repair but could have been saved. I almost fainted when I came home from the army in 1959 and found that it was gone. The grounds where the Crossroads Methodist Church and Cemetery are located was donated from the original Lucinda Wallace property before my family owned the land. There is now a Historical Marker there at the cemetery. I believe Robert Burton Everitt, born 14 March 1821, died 16 March 1884, and his wife, Martha Barr Everitt, born 22 Nov 1819, died 8 Oct 1894, are the oldest people there. Mary Jane Everitt, their daughter, is buried next to them. She never married and lived with her parents all her life because her fiance had been killed in the Civil War. Almost all of my kin of the Everitt/Everett family are buried there. We are also doubly related to the Woodley's through Henry Woodley who married Rebecca "Aunt Becky" Everitt, daughter of Robert Burton Everitt, and his son Richard Beavers Everitt who married Fannie A. Woodley. I have been doing genealogy for over 40 years and have tons of information on families that were either related to us or lived in the vicinity of Scottsville, Crossroads, Blocker, Gill, Elysian Fields, and Marshall.