Exploring Almost Forgotten Gravesites in the Great State of Ohio

Dedicated to cemetery preservation in the great state of Ohio


"A cemetery may be considered as abandoned when all or practically all of the bodies have been Removed therefrom and no bodies have been buried therein for a great many years, and the cemetery has been so long neglected as entirely to lose its identity as such, and is no longer known, recognized and respected by the public as a cemetery. 1953 OAG 2978."

Thursday, September 30, 2021

Sharing this story from WKBN.com - Youngstown - " Hartford Turning to Voters to Maintain Cemeteries" - Hartford Township Cemetery & Hayes Cemetery & West Street Cemetery

One statement to keep in mind that stands out significantly in this news story is this will be the first time the Hartford Township Trustees are placing a cemetery levy on the ballot for voters to have their say -- to either pass or fail.  This is a pivotal point to ponder considering there are 3 cemeteries in Hartford Township.  

Most certainly each cemetery has veterans buried in it going back as early as the American Revolutionary War and several who served in the War of 1812 and Civil War.  

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One resource that helps identify early veterans buried in these cemeteries is the W.P.A. Cemetery Plat Maps in the 1930s during the years of the Great Depression.  

Below is an image of the ‘Legend of Wars’ listing of the names of wars, uprisings, and insurrections, with corresponding numbers. The proper number for the war a veteran served in are shown by his name on the cemetery's map page.  The plat map itself reflects veteran burial locations by lot number,  grave number, and their war number.  The last known war at the time was World War I.  

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  The three cemeteries in Hartford Township, Trumbull County, Ohio are - with their respective W.P.A. Cemetery Plat Maps shown below their names.:

Hayes (AKA Burghill) Cemetery  


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Hartford Township (AKA Hartford Center) Cemetery


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West Street Cemetery

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By browsing through the Find A Grave memorials posted for any of these three cemeteries, several early 1800s marker photos, in particular, were included and can be viewed in an enlarged format that show just how severely deteriorated the gravestone has become.  So much so that an inscription can now barely be read; if at all.  One such example is for Chloe Waite Bushnell who died in 1832 at the age of 94 and was buried at the Hartford Township Cemetery.  A close-up view of her slightly leaning marker photo posted in 2010 clearly shows long time evidence of surface erosion of the stone. 

Once these markers and the stories they tell are gone; they are gone forever.  If we are fortunate, at an earlier time, their inscriptions were read, correctly transcribed, and published.  Perhaps earlier photographs exist of them in better more readable condition.  These markers were erected to stand and mark a grave - a final resting place.  A skilled stonecutter carved the deceased's name, age, date of death, possibly an epitaph and a befitting motif commemorating their life - all on a well-chosen sturdy stone.  

The ill-effects of passing decades, including sadly vicious vandalism, have all taken their toll on these markers; but so did local apathy and neglect.  

Passing cemetery levies helps provide the means for necessary duties to be regularly performed to keep the grounds and grave markers maintained as they should be.  Funds from levies provide peace of mine for those who have purchased gravesites at their community cemeteries; and for descendants of ancestors long ago who found peace and rest on those local hallowed grounds.  

Cemeteries are deserving of our utmost respect - they are integral to the vitality of the surrounding community - and reflect its unique heritage.

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“This is a Cemetery”

"Lives are commemorated - deaths are recorded - families are reunited - memories are made tangible - and love is undisguised. 

This is a cemetery.

Communities accord respect, families bestow reverence, historians seek information and our heritage is thereby enriched.

Testimonies of devotion, pride and remembrance are carved in stone to pay warm tribute to accomplishments and to the life - not death - of a loved one.

The cemetery is homeland for family memorials that are a sustaining source of comfort to the living.

A cemetery is a history of people - a perpetual record of yesterday and a sanctuary of peace and quiet today. A cemetery exists because every life is worth loving and remembering - always."

By

~ Mary Lou Brannon ~

 
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Sharing from the "Weekly Villager" - "Mystery of our history" tour - Garrettsville, Portage County, Ohio - Saturday October 2, 2021 - Walks are 10am, 11am & Noon

Sharing this news story from the "Weekly Villager" announcing the upcoming  "Mystery of our history" tour - in Garrettsville, Portage County, Ohio

There are three walks scheduled on Saturday, October 2 - at 10am, 11am & noon.  

The event is a fund raiser for the continued efforts to restore and preserve the Baptist Cemetery in Garrettsville  

Please refer to the news story for greater details about this event.:
Also, additional details can be provided by contacting Debbie Smith @ 330-389-1859

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Mr. Tim Foor of Hallowed Ground Cemetery Preservation LLC, a central Ohio cemetery professional preservationist, has been conducting the necessary repairs at the Baptist Cemetery in Garrettsville.  

This October 2, 2021 fund raising event will help toward completing the remaining work that is vital to ensuring a brighter future for this early Ohio cemetery.  

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Monday, September 6, 2021

1234 9th Street - Lorain Ohio - A small home for sale with a special history to this writer for more than one reason.

1234 9th Street in Lorain, Ohio is probably among the smallest homes for sale in the city.  In fact, it is probably among the smallest homes in Lorain period! This cozy cottage only has two bedrooms, a dining room, living room, a small kitchen; and its only bathroom is in the basement. 

My grandparents, Winfield Scott Limes and Essie Lillian (Lombard) Limes, moved into 1234 9th Street in 1946.  Sadly, my grandmother died at the end of 1948 on December 28th.  However, my grandfather lived at this address until his death on May 16, 1959.  His death came so tragically, however, due to an injury sustained in a fall going down the stairs to use the bathroom. 

But, before my grandmother died in 1948, she and my grandfather celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary.  The news of the event was published in the "Lorain Journal" Friday, June 7th, 1946 that it would be coming up on Sunday, June 9th.  The couple's actual date of marriage was on June 10th, 1896.  My grandmother was born on June 14, 1877 in Spirit Lake, Iowa. 

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Winfield Scott Limes spent his entire working years in the building trades, specifically doing lathing of commercial and residential structures in Ohio.  He was instrumental in getting the first local for the Wood Wire & Metal International Lathers Union - Local #1 in Columbus, Ohio in 1899. 

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From the "Lorain Journal", Lorain, Ohio - May 17, 1959:

 "'Scott' Limes, Pioneer Lathers' Union Member, Dies After Fall"

"LORAIN - Winfield Scott Limes, 84, vice president of the Lorain County Building Trades Council and well known in lathers union activities, died yesterday at 9:25p.m. in St. Joseph Hospital as a result of injuries suffered Friday in a fall in his home, 1234 Ninth Street. 

 A neighbor found Mr. Limes after the fall lying in a pool of blood at the bottom of the basement stairs, police reported.  Mr. Limes suffered a skull fracture, broken arm and dislocated right shoulder.

 In 1899, Mr. Limes helped organize the international union of AFL-Wood, Wire and Metal Lathers and became the first president of its first local No. 1 in Columbus.

 Mr. Limes has been vice president of the Lorain County Building Trades Council for 17 years.  Ranking as probably the longest-active union member in the county, he was business agent of Lathers Union Local 171.

 From the beginning of his union membership 57 years ago Limes "always knew the labor movement would amount to something."  He had been a lather for 60 years, starting in Columbus at age 17 to assist his father, a plasterer. 

 In 1904 Limes moved to Lorain, attracted by extensive building under way, including Breakers Hotel at Cedar Point.  He was in the county four years and then went back to Columbus.  Another wave of building in 1920 brought him back to Lorain again, this time to stay.

 Mr. Limes' wife, Essie, died in 1948.  Survivors are two sons, Albert; Elyria, and Harry, Lorain; nine grandchildren; 27 great-grandchildren; two brothers, Warren and Thomas, Columbus, and a sister, Mrs. Mabel Thomas, Balboa, California.

 Friends will be received in the Reichlin-Cooley Funeral Home where services will be tomorrow at 2 p.m.  The Rev. Edward Spencer will officiate.  Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery. 

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