Ok, everyone's going to hate me now!! Not five minutes after my previous
posting I got the ok to post to the lists!! I've been swamped with requests
since my posting, so here are the articles. ENJOY!!!
Kymm
http://hometown.aol.com/kymmdenise/genealogy.html
Both articles can be found in The Huntsville Times Life Pages F1 and F5 on
Sunday April 8, 2001. Both written by Megan N. Walde. Along with the
articles are 3 photos and a map of the Madison area of Madison County,
Alabama. Seeing as how I can't give you those due to Rootsweb's rules, I
will try to get them on my website by the end of the day.
Article one:
The quick and the dead
Historians hasten to preserve granite legacies in old cemeteries on paper and
film
By Megan N. Walde Times Staff Writer
MADISON - An industrial clanging echoes along County Line Road. John RANKIN
grabs his faded blue duffle bag, and Percy KEEL shoulders a homemade poker
from the back of a hulking, go-anywhere van.
The men head directly to the heart of this emerald-moss-lined wood. They
know it is here, somewhere - a stone grave marker for a Civil War soldier
named William WARD.
A work crew near the site the day before had hit some granite and thought
it might be part of an old cemetery.
A worker had called a researcher to the public library. She had called
RANKIN, on of the foremost cemetery historians in this area. RANKIN had
called KEEL, a fellow historian, and within days the two were off on another
search.
So many old cemeteries are found this way - too many, according to RANKIN
and other history buffs.
As Madison continues to grow, abandoned graveyards are discovered amid the
symbols of progress, such as video stores and subdivisions. As bulldozers
clear more land for townhomes, restaurants and gas stations, developers and
residents in Madison - and other cities - are literally stumbling over these
crumbling links to the past.
That's where RANKIN, a retired engineer, and KEEL, a longtime mail carrier,
come in. The two are trying to preserve Madison's past on paper and film
before it's gone.
They make regular visits to known abandoned cemeteries in and around the
city to monitor the conditions of stones and graves, photographing each stone
and making digital copies. They add each one to a database at
www.virtualcemetery.org.
"They're going to disappear someday no matter what you do," RANKIN says of
cemeteries. "This is the only thing we can do to make sure people can always
view them."
RANKIN's interest in cemeteries grew out of genealogical work. As he
searched for friends' ancestors and his own, he came across burial
information. When possible, he found the graves and photographed them. He
enjoyed the work, but he spent many afternoons in the local library trying to
match his finds with the historical records of an area he didn't know much
about.
The Gooch Cemetery
On a brisk, gray day in January, Richard BROWN awaits a quick haircut from
his sister, who works at the Big Tease hair salon on Hughes Road. BROWN
walks his dog around the back of the salon and follows him into an isolated
grove of trees on a slight hill.
For what may be the third time in a dozen years, the GOOCH Cemetery is
"discovered."
Mary Anne HAMM knew the gravestones were there. One marks the grave of her
great-grandfather Nathaniel Matson GOOCH, son of early Madison landowner
Roland GOOCH. Land records show Roland GOOCH bought 160 acres on Feb. 2,
1818, the same day legendary settler John CARTWRIGHT bought his first Madison
parcel.
February 1818 was the first time the U.S. government allowed settlers to
buy land belonging to the Indians, although many settlers had been faming and
living on the land long before that.
HAMM also knows the GOOCH Cemetery used to look different. She and her
husband used to visit and clean the graves in the '70s.
"It was 10 times bigger then," HAMM says.
Today the cemetery is surrounded by houses, stores and banks.
There are seven marked graves in all, including other GOOCHES and a DUBLIN.
At least 15 more are marked by small fieldstones and the rectangular
depressions RANKIN and KEEL know to look for.
One grave seems out of place. A marker for 7-year-old Katie S. STEWART
sits next to those of Nathaniel Matson and his wife, Susan. RANKIN and KEEL
puzzled for years over how Katie figured into the GOOCH family's history.
The answer came from HAMM, who heard stories about the GOOCHES in "the old
days" from her grandmother.
"I would crawl up in her lap, and she would show me pictures and all tat of
my family way back," HAMM says.
HAMM remembered Katie's story. Katie was born deformed with a growth in
her head. When her parents gave her up, the GOOCHES took her in.
"There are so many parts to these stories," RANKIN says, "it's like
putting
a puzzle together."
On the west side of town, behind a storage center on Balch Road, there's
another cemetery mystery.
Beneath a blanket of dead winter leaves, mounds of slave made clay brick
cover the graves of members of many old Madison families - GRAY, BLACKBURN,
BURNS, MAXWELL, SANDERSON, and WOOD, among others. The GRAY Cemetery is also
the resting place of at least two and maybe three Revolutionary War soldiers.
The two soldiers known to be buried there are James TRIBBLE and William
GRAY. RANKIN and library archivist Ranee PRUITT want to find the grave of
the third soldier, Moses BAILEY.
"It's more than just the history," says PRUITT, a member of the Daughters
of the Revolution. "It's the place, the history of our community. You can
tell a lot about someone by their tombstone.
'Corp'l. WM. WARD, Co. H'
Sometimes, the puzzle pieces fall into place, like last week when RANKIN
got a call that construction workers had found what might be a Civil War
burial ground off County Line Road near the airport.
Some county maps note a cemetery at that location; others don't. But as
soon as RANKIN and KEEL get to the site, they know. All the tell-tale signs
of an old cemetery are there. Sunken rectangles. Moss everywhere. Yucca
plants. Tall, slender cedar trees.
As the two men walk the site, they notice another clue. The area is the
highest around, sloping gently toward a swampy creek leading to the Tennessee
River.
Then they find it.
William WARD's headstone leans precariously toward a tree trunk, the bottom
half well-covered by dirt and moss. RANKIN drops the blue duffle bag within
arm's reach, drops to knees and prepares the stone for cleaning and
photographing.
Using a drywall sponge, he lightly scrubs surface dirt from the stone and
blows the dust away. His fingers reverently trace the letters on the stone
as he reads it, then he fishes out a piece of blue chalk from a plastic
baggie to highlight the text.
"Corp'l WM. WARD, Co. H. 15th U.S.C.T."
If what RANKIN suggests about the site is true, he believes it should be a
major historical attraction.
He points to two letters on the WARD headstone - C.T. According to his
military records WARD was a corporal in Company H, a "colored troop" in the
Union Army's 15th Regiment.
RANKIN is fascinated.
"How did he get here? Why was he buried so far from home? Why is his the
only grave marked with a stone? Who put it there, the military or his
family? Was this a black cemetery?"
He counts the other graves and points out the rigidly straight rows, 11 in
all, each with 11 graves.
To one side of the cemetery is a leaf-covered, man-made trench.
"Did they cut this as protection during a battle, something to sort of hide
behind?" RANKIN wonders aloud.
KEEL, meanwhile, is trudging among the trees, stepping hard to find hidden
stones. He occasionally pokes beneath the earth with the sharp metal end of
his homemade poker.
He finds half of another stone, but it's a good foot or more below the
surface and too far to dig out.
RANKIN and KEEL think WARD's marker is the only one left in what might have
been a cemetery for black soldiers. Typically, the original markers would
have been wooden crosses replaced later by family members.
The construction workers who found the cemetery are putting in a
communication tower. That likely won't disturb the cemetery, RANKIN says.
But even if development doesn't destroy or encroach upon abandoned cemetery
sites, nature will do its best.
When trees fall, they can shatter gravestones. The roots of trees can
create a sunken bowl that envelops and eventually buries graves and stones.
Time and weather erase parts of names and dates, making it critical that
stones are identified as soon as they are found.
That's what RANKIN and KEEL do last before they leave the WARD stone.
They will add the photographs, a site description and WARD's background to
the collection they've amassed since 1998. RANKIN would like to see all of
Madison's abandoned cemeteries donated to the city, fenced and maintained.
Only one is now. It is the DILLARD-BIBB Cemetery, which sits off Sullivan
Street inside Governors Estates. The subdivision was built around the
cemetery because it was once thought to the burial place for the ancestors of
Alabama's first two governors, brothers William and Thomas BIBB.
"People need to be more aware, or we're going to lose this whole historical
part of our existence as we build more shopping centers," PRUITT says.
RANKIN encourages people to record their own family gravesites or those in
their area with a simple point-and-shoot camera and upload the images to a
genealogical web site.
He also has found another way residents can help prevent the disappearance
of old cemeteries.
Five or more people - they don't have to be descendants of anyone buried in
the cemetery - can petition the county clerk to take the cemetery out of
private property. The clerk then assesses the cemetery property, and if
those people can come up with that dollar amount, the cemetery is theirs to
maintain in the public domain.
"Really all you can do is delay the inevitable," RANKIN says, "but what
it
comes down to is who cares."
Article Two:
Old cemeteries often emerge from the mists of history when development moves
in
By Megan N. WALDE
In fast-growing Madison, surveyors and utility workers are often the first to
discover old burial grounds as they prepare land for development. State law
says they can't simply bulldoze the site once a cemetery is identified. It's
a misdemeanor in Alabama to move or deface tombstones or graves.
But sometimes the identification comes too late.
"Where (the cemeteries are) poorly marked or partially washed away, they
can sometimes be dug up before you realize you're in them," said Whitey
BRESSETTE, Madison Water & Wastewater Board general manager.
Utility workers often run water and sewer lines across otherwise vacant
land, to encourage development in those areas. In the process, they
sometimes run across whole tombstones, granite chunks or contents of graves
themselves.
"All the operators know to stop at the first sign of a grave," BRESSETTE
said. "What we're doing is the best we can to be as aware as we can."
While city workers were building a pipeline for the Keene Water Treatment
Plant on Gillespie Road two and a half years ago, they found a cemetery.
"When we recognized what it was, we simply redid the easements, built a
fence and went around it," BRESSETTE said.
Phillip WILBANKS, president of the Tennessee Valley Professional Land
Surveyors Association, has come across 10 to 12 cemeteries in his 30-year
career. He tries to find a deed for each one.
"Sometimes there's not a deed to it," WILBANKS said. "It's just
sitting in
the middle of nowhere."
Then it's up to the developer to leave the cemetery alone or to follow
strict state guidelines for moving it.
The developer must file a public notice in a local newspaper for two
months, alerting residents that he wants to move the graves. He has to make
a "reasonable attempt" to locate and notify descendants of those buried in
the cemetery. Finally, he has to follow Health Department guidelines for
removal of human remains, and those remains must be reburied and marked in
another cemetery.