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Forgotten Cemeteries of Illinois

February 18th, 2010

There are cemeteries with thousands of visitors each year: Graceland;  Rosehill; Springfield’s Oak Ridge, which has spaces for tour buses in its parking lot;  Arlington National.

Hancock County Poor Farm Cemetery

Hancock County Poor Farm Cemetery

On the other extreme, some graveyards are entirely forgotten – lost in the deep woods, monuments scattered or plowed under.   Or, they may be known only to local authorities, or the owner of the land or neighbouring land.  Monuments might be piled haphazardly in a corner of the cemetery, or around the bases of trees; the grass is cut infrequently or not at all.

In such places, one might drive by a seemingly empty field, a grove of trees, or an ordinary fence, not knowing a graveyard is there.

Some of these cemeteries, however, are known to local historians and to the researchers of the U.S. Geological Survey, which recorded their latitude and longitude, perhaps before the cemetery was “forgotten” to the general public.  Using their list, graveyard explorers like me have found and walked through some of these cemeteries – alongside or within farmers’ fields, in woods, on a golf course, in a scrap yard.

In rural Hancock County, Illinois, next to a farm field lies a seemingly empty grassy area, bordered with trees.  It doesn’t look like a graveyard at all, even when one begins walking through it.  But behind one large tree (near the centre of the above photo), leaning against the trunk, are the only two remaining headstones.

A small patch of woods near Kankakee conceals the Old State Hospital Cemetery – which is barely there at all, with one visible headstone and a scattering of fragments.

Drake

Monument at Drake Cemetery

Drake Cemetery, in Boone County, also has just a handful of tombstones.  Surrounded by woods, and with the few stones knocked to the ground, it is not recognizable as a cemetery from even a few feet away.

Formerly Forgotten

In some cases, however, efforts are made to restore and recognize forgotten cemeteries.   Nearby cities or other authorities often take over the property, repair monuments, and erect signs.  In Palatine, Wolfrum Cemetery has been restored; though every monument had been knocked down and damaged in the past, they are now set into concrete frames in the ground, and a sign informs the visitor of the cemetery’s name and overseeing authority.

In the southwest part of Cook County, Sauerbier-Burkhardt Cemetery has undergone a similar restoration.  For years, hikers told tales of gravestones in the woods near 135th street.  In the 1984, the site was acquired by the Cook County Forest Preserve District; and when a residential subdivision was built nearby, the county set the stones upright, added a bicycle and walking trail that passed alongside the cemetery, and erected a sign detailing the history of the Sauerbier and Burkhardt families.

Dewes Cemetery, Restored

Dewes Cemetery, Cook County, Restored

Local Boy Scouts adopt forgotten cemeteries as community service projects.   For many years, a nondescript chain link fence enclosed an overgrown clearing, hidden away in woods on a golf course in Glenview.  When I visited the site in the late 1990s, nothing at all could be seen behind the locked gate except weeds growing to the height of a man.  But now, the cemetery is open, well kept, and properly marked: Dewes Cemetery is cared for by a Scout, as the new sign proudly states.

With the technology available to us, no cemetery need be forgotten.  The lists assembled by the US Geological Survey are invaluable in locating these places; they can then be visited, photographed, and documented on web sites like this one.  Though monuments may be scattered, broken, face down, or weathered to illegibility, we can still commemorate and preserve these sacred places.

graveyards

  1. February 19th, 2010 at 10:12 | #1

    It’s sad to see forgotten graveyards. They should be perserved as sacred places.

  2. Lisa
    February 23rd, 2010 at 14:35 | #2

    I grew up in Marion, IL, and there is a section of town (built for post-war coal miners) we used to call “Cardboard City,” because every house had that shingle-shake siding so common in 1940s-50s government-built housing.

    The land that Cardboard City sits on was once a farm (the farm house still stands) and the family cemetery is in the backyard of one of the houses on Duncan Street. I guess it was too cost-prohibitive to move the graves, so they just built the houses around it. Some people would find that creepy but not me. I always thought it was cool.

  3. February 26th, 2010 at 22:02 | #3

    This is an excellent post. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!

  4. April 3rd, 2010 at 22:28 | #4

    Welcome to the Geneabloggers family. Hope you find the association fruitful; I sure do. I have found it most stimulating, especially some of the Daily Themes.

    May you keep sharing your ancestor stories!

    Dr. Bill ;-)
    http://drbilltellsancestorstories.blogspot.com/
    Author of Back to the Homeplace
    http://thehomeplaceseries.blogspot.com/

  5. Dorletha Smith
    April 4th, 2010 at 13:58 | #5

    I’m Trying to locate information about Saint George Cemetery,Located 3230 Cemetery RD.Millstadt, Ill. (Age of Location, Names of the Burried, etc..) Thanks for any Information wil be helpful. Ms. Smith

  6. Diane T
    April 12th, 2010 at 19:08 | #6

    I wonder does anyone have information about the Glos Cemetery in Elmhurst? I drive by it often.

  7. Sherry
    April 19th, 2010 at 18:31 | #7

    Does anyone have any information on the Old Bradley Cemetery Ridgway, Gallatin County, Illinois?

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