Go to Tuskegee, Alabama. (I presume you know how to get there, but if you don't, you can find it on any map. It's the county seat.) Take U.S. Highway 29 northeast out of Tuskegee (signs probably say to Auburn). You will pass through a little community called Pleasant Hill. Stay on 29 in the same direction. A few miles further on you will come to the little community of Alliance. At Alliance, you turn almost due south (right turn) on a county road whose number I can't remember. (Alliance is just a wide place in the road, as we say in Alabama, but there is - at least there used to be - a store/gas station there, and if you ask, anyone can show you the way to Little Texas.) Stay straight on this road for about 3 miles, and it will take you directly to Little Texas. I'm sorry that I can't remember road numbers, but once you arrive at the Little Texas community (another wide place in the road), you can ask your way to the cemetery. People in rural Alabama are friendly and glad to help you with directions if you ask. Little Texas was a popular Methodist campground for many years, and there is indeed a cemetery there. The problem is that many of the graves are either unmarked (probably were marked originally with wooden crosses or markers that have disappeared over the years) or the headstones are unreadable, and so far as I know, the graves have never been catalogued. I don't want to discourage you, but unless somebody has told you in recent years that they've seen your relatives' graves, I wouldn't make too much of a trip. It would probably be worth a trip from Montgomery, Atlanta, or Birmingham, say, but I certainly wouldn't come from New Orleans or New York City. Unfortunately, Alabama didn't keep death records until 1908, but the records at the Macon County courthouse in Tuskegee are about as good as you find anywhere in small towns in the South, and the people in the clerk's office are pleasant and helpful. They just point you toward the records room and let you do your thing, which I prefer. Tuskegee is a nice little town built around a town square, parking is free, and there are places near the courthouse where you can get a sandwich if you need a break. I was there about two weeks ago, and their Probate Notes (contained in bound volumes that go back to the 1840s) are a gold mine. The clerk himself (very nice man) came back once to see if we were finding what we needed. He told us that they have transferred some records to the Alabama Department of Archives and History at Montgomery and have others that are housed in a building across the street from the courthouse, where they are being catalogued. If you are looking for a particular type of record, it's probably worth a call in advance to see if it's still in Tuskegee, or if it's been sent to Montgomery. Good luck and good hunting.