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H. Warren Smith Cemetery

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Asbury Fletcher Brown is buried in Section A of the cemetery and his upright marble headstone is one of the oldest in the cemetery. He was born in Vienna, Georgia, and married Elinor Dickinson of Charleston, South Carolina, on Oct. 3,1849. They had five children. He was listed as a farmer in the 1850 Census.


Upright marble headstone

Plant, Cemetery, Leaf, Tree

Headstone and flat government marker

Plant, Cemetery, Nature, Botany

Obit

Font, Close-up, Monochrome, Monochrome photography

Asbury Fletcher Brown was an early Beaches settler who came to Florida from South Georgia in the late 1850s and acquired several acres of land south of Jacksonville Beach. When the Civil War broke out, he joined the Florida Partisan Rangers, an independent band of the Confederate Army who ambushed Union gunboats along the St. Johns River. In 1863, he was captured by Union forces and spent 22 months as a prisoner of war at the infamous federal prison at Fort Delaware. After the war, Brown returned to his wife and five children to raise cattle and produce turpentine on his Pablo Beach homestead. He died of consumption.

Find a Grave

1950 Census

"Early Beaches settler persevered at infamous Union prison during Civil War," Dec. 13, 2012, The Beaches Leader, Jacksonville Beach, Florida. Johnny Woodhouse, associate editor.