The entrance to the abandoned cemetery. |
I love walking through cemeteries. There is something peaceful about it. As I walk past tombstones I look to see who the person is and how long they lived. Unfortunately I will sometimes walk past a grave of a young child. I look at the year and see 1918. I realize a large flu epidemic was sweeping across the nation at that time. Could this young child have died from this flu? I ask myself. I stand at the gravesite and look around. 95 years prior this child's family stood on this same piece of Earth mourning their loss. I look at the surroundings and take note of the trees. I try to imagine some of the younger trees gone and the older tall trees to look smaller. Was there a reason the family chose this particular spot to bury their child? Is this child still remembered even after all these years or is the grave and name forgotten about? I will stand and ponder some of these questions. I will walk around and note some of the other graves that might have a memorial plaque next to them that says they served their country. I will look at the dates and see if they died after they served or was their life ended early by the horrors of war. Some headstones will have neat sayings on them, pictures (either carved into the stone or actual photographs) and some I have even seen with their children's names on the back side of the stone. Our headstone is one of our last tangible item we leave for others to know that we were here in Earth at one point in history and most of the time we pass away leaving that part up to living family members to decide what to put on it.
It was a few years after we moved to Osceola County that I read a newspaper article about an organization trying to fix the Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery that sadly slipped from many residence's memory and forgot about. In the article they talked about how many of the stones were so old that the names and dates were hard to read. I became very curious to where this cemetery was located and I wanted to check it out for myself. My husband and I asked around a few businesses to see where the cemetery was located. We got some help from the library and another place of business gave us a good indication of where to look. We eventually found it and took the children to go see it, as they also have an enjoyment of visiting cemeteries.
My daughter, Ashton, trying to figure out one of the hard to read headstones. Pic taken May 2009 |
Pic taken May 2009. My son Halvor and Christian in the background. |
Pic taken May 2009 |
One of the family plots. Pic taken May 2009 |
It was easy to tell where a family plot was located by bricks that made a huge square around an area. Some headstones were still erect within the stone square but others were broken or missing. One area was even loosely fenced in and a military plaque was placed next to one of their headstones. One headstone was even handmade which made me wonder if the family didn't have enough funds to purchase a proper headstone. Ironically, the homemade headstone looks better than the proper made ones.
The writing is still there but it is started to look faded. Pic taken July 2013 Pic credited to L. Morrone |
Guardian Angel placed next to an unknown stone Pic taken July 2013 Pic credited to L. Morrone |
Time weathered away the name on this stone. You can kind of make out the dip in front of the stone from the pic. Pic taken July 2013 Pic credited to L. Morrone |
Top part of the grave marker vandalized. Pic taken July 2013 Pic credited to L. Morrone |
Unknown stone Pic taken July 2013 Pic credited to L. Morrone |
Another tombstone that weathered away who was laid at rest there. Pic taken July 2013 Pic credited to L. Morrone |
It was odd how the ferns grew up right over where the body would be. Pic taken July 2013 Pic credit to L. Morrone |
Someone has been maintaining this gravesite. Pic taken July 2013 Pic credit to L. Morrone |
How was it that this cemetery be forgotten about? Good question. Evart was a logging, transient type of town that was organized in 1872. Different logging companies would come in, cut their wood and eventually move on. Some bring their families with them and other set forth on their own. People died. If the person was working with the logging camps around the late 1800's and a person perished with no family around they cannot send the body back home. Refrigeration wasn't that good back then and the body would spoil. That would not be a pleasant thing for a grieving family to have to deal with. So they would bury the body in a nearby cemetery. The area was a new area. If a husband or wife passes on and they don't have outside family around then the living spouse might take the remaining family back to where they came from to get help in raising the children. So they move away leaving the deceased loved one behind with no one to tend to the grave.
The cemetery didn't start at this location on S. River rd. The church burned down but the cemetery remained. In the 1950's GM built an auto plant, Ventra, where the catholic church used to be but the cemetery had to be moved for the parking lot to go in. Loved ones were contacted to help move the bodies. Many couldn't be contacted. Some of the names were misplaced with moving of the bodies and no one was there to help name them. Whether some remained on that spot and was paved over is unknown but it does leave it up to imagination of what if. The bodies were then moved over to the spot where they rest now on S. River Rd. ( N 43° 52' 59.99" W 85° 17' 30.01" (43.88333, -85.29167))
I still am baffled at how a cemetery that was moved in the 1950's could be forgotten about so quickly. In the article about the abandoned cemetery it mentioned why the catholic church wasn't tending to this since it was the catholic cemetery. If I remember correctly the catholic church lost or didn't keep the records of this cemetery and they didn't know they were responsible for it.
The best time to view this cemetery would be early spring when the grass is still short and the leaves aren't fully on the trees yet so the sun can shine brightly on the ground. It also makes it easier to see the "dips" with the grass and weeds kept low. If anyone does venture out in that direction I ask that you please be respectful and not touch the stones as they are fragile with their age. Thank you.
Oh, I love this post! I also like to wander isolated cemeteries and think of the lives they must have once led. Growing up, our school bus would sometimes travel a gravel road that cut through a rise. If one raised up in their seat and looked up high, you could just make out an abandoned something. I was fascinated! Some 30 years later (and oh my! 20 years ago now) I moved back to that area after the breakup of my marriage. Talking to my mom, I located where that "something" was, and discovered a long forgotten cemetery. If memory serves me correctly, the most recent graves were from the 1920's with only one that dated in the 1950's. Amazingly, someone was keeping it mowed.
ReplyDeleteDuring the eight years I was back in that area, that cemetery became a place of untouchable peace in a period of turbulence in my life.
There is such peace in old cemeteries. There is the imagining of lives lived to distract your mind, and there is the sadness of illegible and missing tombstones--people who's names and faces and life stories are forgotten for all time. Sadly, it makes sense of a saying from the X-files: You live on as long as the memory of you does.
Well some infois correct onyour article on south river rd cemetary i cleaned up alot of it in there actually met family members of the deceased my pa property is to the rivht of said grave stones i done research my self on the site iwill continue to try to preserve what ican there and yes weve caught vandals there cameras may go up to see the un seen
DeleteI love this post! I love to do the same thing. I always wonder who the people were and what they were like and about their lives. My cousin lives in Evart, so I am hoping she and I can explore there! Thanks for posting this!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the post! I am fortunate enough to have been there this weekend to see the lost forgotten and pay my respect!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, i also have the same interest, there are many long forgotten burial sites all around us and they hold alot of history of what once was but they also deserve our respect so if you do venture into these places please be respectful and by all means enjoy the feeling of peace and quiet and use that time to say hi to those long forgotten souls.
ReplyDeleteThere's another old cemetery over on 70th just north west of 13 mile Rd that's returning back to Mother Earth. I was by there about eight years ago and the brush was starting to take over.
ReplyDeleteThat is the Avondale Cemetery in 70th. I have quite a bit of family there.
ReplyDeleteActually the Avondale Cemetery is Cherry Valley. It is still maintained. A nice small country cemetery. The Avondale Church is still open too. That's a beautiful historic church.
DeleteThat's very interesting. Would have been quite intriguing to see.
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing it was forgotten because most of the people were not locale. I have made it a point to visit this cemetery and found it in poor condition but peaceful and serene. Need to get back into headstone etching:/
ReplyDeleteMany residents are now starting to take care of the cemetery and their talking about fixing the stones and digging up the buried headstones. I visited it today with my brother who is part of the group trying to rehab the cemetery.
ReplyDeleteI am the great granddaughter of John Lennon (1837-1892) who is buried at this cemetery. He came from County Carlow in Ireland with his family at the height of the famine. The boat took them to Montreal, Canada where the poorest of the poor Irish went 'cause passage to America was too high. Thousands of Irish died at this time in Montreal due to overcrowding and terrible communicable diseases. John was ten years old when his father died and he assumed the position of head of the family. At age 20 he moved to Lapeer County, Michigan where they were starting to chop down the forests for money. He married Ellen McFarlane and they started having many children, eleven to be exact. They moved to Osceola County and homesteaded 440 acres, much of it timber (one of his huge barns still exists in Avondale). He became the County Road Commissioner. Eventually, all the good timber was chopped down (what you see now in Osceola county is 2nd and 3rd growth). Money became scarce so John and his older sons went to Washington state where they got work chopping down the cedar forests. He drowned while riding a huge amount of floating logs into Puget Sound. They shipped his body back to Avondale and ended up in this cemetery. He also has two daughters buried with him: Edith and Florence.
ReplyDeleteSo Interesting. I drive past the cemetery several times a week, as it is on my way to work and back. I saw the cemetery pop up on the GPS and wondered about it, since there's no gate or sign up at the road. I'd like to visit there sometime this summer if I can. Old cemeteries are interesting from an epidemiology standpoint also.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting. My grandmother’s little brother Henry McViegh, is buried in that cemetery. He drowned in a lake or river near Evart at the age of 6 or 7 in 1888.
ReplyDelete