Natchez Revisited Detail
home
Angels on the Bluff Tickets
history
cemetery tours
products
about us
newsletters
cemetery news
photo gallery
contact us
links
Thomas Henderson 1798 - 1863
privacy policy
John A. Quitman 1798 - 1858
General Zebulon York
Angels on the Bluff Tour Schedule
Joseph Louis Fermin Cerveau
Natchez vs Robert E. Lee
Builders of antebellum mansions
Don Estes' Top of the Morning article
Map
Bishop John Edward Gunn
04/20/2003 - Cemetery can teach lessons

By: David Wecker

On a bright chilly goose- pimply Halloween day, 17 students from Silver Grove School's eighth-grade class learned there's more to cemeteries than cold stones and the dearly departed.

The scene was Cincinnati's Spring Grove Cemetery, a fittingly Gothic backdrop for the occasion, the kind of a setting where young imaginations don't need much prodding to take flight. At the head of the class was Linda Prather, who teaches seventh- and eighth-grade social studies and language arts at Silver Grove, a Northern Kentucky school with a combined enrollment of barely 300 kids from kindergarten through 12th grade.

Linda has been taking her students on field trips to one cemetery or another for the past seven autumns. She's of the opinion that kids can learn all kinds of lessons in all kinds of subjects in graveyards. To that end, she has created a web site filled with cemetery-based learning activities that kids of all ages are welcome to dig into.

Linda's students jotted down notes as Brian Jorg, Spring Grove's assistant manager of horticulture, led them on a walking tour, past obelisks and sarcophagi where many of the men who shaped Cincinnati were laid to rest; stones marked with such names as Hauck, Carew, Probasco, Shillito, Groesbeck, McAlpin, Davidson, Erkenbrecher, Lytle.

Brian paused occasionally to point out some of the cemetery's more interesting features, among them:

An ornate Italian marble mausoleum containing the earthly remains of Jacob Burnet, who helped frame the constitution of the State of Ohio.

"The problem with Italian marble is that it reacts with acid rain, which causes it to degrade," Brian said.

"Some of the earliest monuments here, dating back to the 1840s, were fashioned from sandstone. While sandstone has the virtue of being easy to carve, as you'll see, it degrades very quickly. Nowadays, we require that new monuments coming in be carved from granite, which is basically impervious to the elements.

"We're dealing with perpetuity - or as close as we can get to it. The idea is that, when someone visits here in 500 years, we want them to see pretty much the same things you're seeing now."

A larger-than-life bronze statue of a Union infantryman, his sword drawn, hoisted to the North, standing guard over the cemetery's Civil War-era section.

"We just finished planting 6,000 daffodil bulbs at the base of this monument," Brian said.

"We used to plant tulips, but the deer eat them. They've become a major problem, knocking over small trees, eating certain varieties of roses. It's not unusual to see 30 does here. We're looking at installing a containment fence, which hopefully would keep the deer to the rear of the property."

"It'll be quite a project. The cemetery has grown from 177 acres, which is what it was in the 1840s, to 733 acres today. So the fence will have to be about a mile long."

The small group continued on, past a pond with cypress knees poking up from the water, past Edwin Dexter's lavish mausoleum with its flying buttresses patterned after the style of Notre Dame cathedral, past a grandiose sculpture of Cincinnati Art Museum founder Charles West seated in his favorite chair, past the relatively modest marker of Salmon P. Chase, who was a senator, a chief justice and a governor, but never president.

Brian pointed through the trees to a pinkish stone on top of a hill. He identified it as the resting place of one of the 36 Union generals buried in Spring Grove. This one had the name of Gen. Joseph Hooker carved on it.

"We have him to thank for the term, 'hooker,' " Brian said.

"He believed his men should have all the comforts of home. So he hired women to accompany his troops, to do their cooking, their laundry and, uh, whatever else. The family disputes that part of the story, but it's been described in detail in so many books"

Linda won't bother quizzing her students on this last point.

''That's one story I'm sure the kids will remember,'' she said.




 
 
Summer 2002
Improvements


Summer 2002
Other Projects


September 2002
Vandalism Strikes Our Cemetery


12/23/2004
2004 Angels on the Bluff Recap


12/23/2003
Count Gasmir Dem Bouske


12/22/2003
Making Photographic Records of Gravestones


12/22/2003
A Brief History of Cemeteries


12/16/2005
Social Patterns in Alabama Cemeteries


12/13/2004
1840 Natchez Tornado


12/05/2003
Don Estes Receives Natchezian of the Year Award


11/29/2001
Evening Tour


11/25/2003
Turner South Films Natchez City Cemetery


11/22/2009
Turning Angel Sculpture


11/21/2003
Dying Words


11/16/2009
Tour Images by Michelle of Grapevine, Texas - 1


11/15/2009
Tour Images by Michelle of Grapevine, Texas - 2


11/03/2004
Fagan descendants search for pieces to family puzzle


11/03/2003
The 14th British Colony


11/02/2005
Cross returned to old monument


10/23/2006
Don Estes speaks about Angels on the Bluff 2006


10/23/2006
Only child of the only person hanged for Civil War crimes


10/22/2003
Tombstone Rubbing, Step by Step


10/08/2004
Natchez City Cemetery awarded South’s Best


10/08/2004
Angels on the Bluff 2004


10/07/2004
Director Reports Excellent Year for 2004


10/07/2003
2003 Angels on the Bluff – Hospitality, History and Intrigue


09/29/2008
2008 Angels on the Bluff Tour


09/25/2009
Legends of the Natchez City Cemetery


09/19/2008
Miners, Saints, Sinners and Winners


09/11/2003
Director Reports Repair of 2002 Vandalism Successfully Completed


09/10/2003
Friends of the Cemetery - Dues for 2003


09/10/2003
A Beautiful and Historic Landmark


09/10/2003
Natchez City Cemetery Etiquette


09/10/2003
Angels on the Bluff – October 2003


09/01/2003
Lost Brother Found


09/01/2003
Cemetery Symbolism


09/01/2003
How Not To Conduct a Cemetery Research Trip


09/01/2003
Chalk One Up For the Ancestors


08/29/2007
Body of pre-Civil War bishop returned to Natchez


08/29/2005
Aunt Jessie


08/28/2003
Where is Fermin Cerveau Buried?


08/17/2006
2006 Angels on the Bluff Tour


07/27/2010
2010 Angels on the Bluff Tour


07/23/2009
2009 Angels on the Bluff - Fascinating Characters


07/21/2008
Robert Paxton Trabue - A Fifth Confederate General?


07/21/2008
Maj. General John A. Quitman - Halls of Montezuma


07/20/2004
Old cemetery now must see stop


07/20/2004
Natchez takes top 2004 Excellence Award for best city


07/20/2003
William Johnson - The Barber of Natchez


07/16/2010
Longwood featured in scenes of HBO show’s True Blood


07/09/2003
Natchez Memories


06/26/2007
Cistern House Restoration


06/26/2007
Friends of the Cemetery Dues for 2007


06/26/2007
2007 Angels on the Bluff


06/26/2007
Tours of Historic Natchez City Cemetery


06/04/2004
2004 Angels on the Bluff Scheduled


05/26/2004
Survivor of Natchez Rhythm Club fire dies


05/19/2003
Angels On The Bluff 2003


05/16/2003
What Gravestones Can Tell You


05/16/2003
Quick Tips For Cemetery Photos


04/26/2006
Annual angels tour drew sold out crowd


04/24/2003
Ghosts of History Live in Rosehill Cemetery in Chicago


04/20/2003
Cemeteries tip observers to town folklore, literature


04/20/2003
Cemetery can teach lessons


04/20/2003
Are Dead People Really Dead?


04/15/2005
Jane Surget Merrill


04/07/2004
Natchez Cemetery On Turner South


04/05/2004
Carolina Silverbells


04/05/2004
Red Honeysuckles


03/30/2005
Faded Letters on a Weathered Old Tombstone


03/26/2009
10th Annual Angels on the Bluff Tour


03/25/2004
Concordia Sentinel Story


03/14/2006
Natchez City Cemetery welcomes new director


03/02/2005
Great-great grandparents located


01/25/2009
Louise The Unfortunate Inspires Poem


01/19/2005
Genealogy workshop


01/04/2008
Directors Report


 
 




 



©2010 Natchez City Cemetery. All Rights Reserved.
Please direct comments or questions about this web site to info@natchezcitycemetery.com.