The Sutton Cemetery has more than 3,600 graves on a pleasant, slightly rolling site just north of town. |
Clues
to the history of a town can be found in many places but one of the better
places is where towns bury the most important part of their history, the
cemetery.
“Dead
men tell no tales” was a famous line from the Old West, but it’s not exactly
true. There is plenty to learn from a visit to the cemetery or at least there
are good clues to pursue to be able to tell those stories that dead men can’t.
Primarily
two cemeteries serve the town of Sutton, the Sutton Cemetery north of town and
Calvary Cemetery to the south. There are also several rural cemeteries near
Sutton. The Sutton Cemetery meets our purposes here so we’ll be concentrating
on it.
But
before heading north we’ll make one stop to the south where a person special to
the Sutton Historical Society is buried. Mary M. Maltby died in Sutton in 1912
and is buried in Calvary Cemetery. She was Matilda Mary Cooke of London and
married John Maltby there in 1863. They were Sutton pioneers before moving to
Fairfield. Mary returned and was a part of Sutton after John died in 1895. The
Sutton Museum displays two of her dresses and other memorabilia from that
interesting life.
Now,
north of town to the Sutton Cemetery.
The
first two things to notice in the Sutton Cemetery are just inside the gate. To
the left is a monument in memory of Jack Nolde who coincidently died just 25
years ago in March, 1989. Carl H. “Jack” Nolde was a philanthropist to the city
of Sutton and elsewhere. One of his donations was an endowment for the benefit
of the Sutton Cemetery leading to improvements and maintenance of the grounds.
Elizabeth Steinmetz and her infant daughter were the first burials in Sutton Cemetery in 1876. There is evidence that the infant's name was Ida Elizabeth. |
To
the right is one of Jack Nolde’s gifts to the cemetery, a monument to the first
burials in the cemetery, Elizabeth Steinmetz and her infant daughter in 1876.
Mr. Nolde is buried just to the north behind the Steinmetz marker.
Sutton
was a serious settlement in 1871, five years before that date of the “first”
burials. So was there an earlier cemetery? I understand that there were burials
near to downtown and the creek possibly in the park. Those bodies were moved to
the new cemetery, as I have been led to believe.
Cemeteries
are designed in a variety of ways, some straightforward, others not so much. Fortunately
we have a directory for the Sutton Cemetery located straight in from the gate
and near the maintenance building.
The cemetery is laid out in three major sections, north, south and west with the entry road dividing the north and south sections. The west section is, well, to the west. Rows are numbered and clearly marked, for instance, 03N is the third row in the north section.
The full description of a grave location is a four part item formatted as 01N-20-05-12 with each element describing an increasingly specific location, row, block, lot and grave. The directory of burials and a map of the cemetery is on the city web site at: http://www.cityofsutton.com/cemetery.html
You’ll
note on the map that the sequence of block numbers goes across all rows in a
section and that the lots within the blocks are not numbered the way you and I
might have done it. Luckily, in a practical sense, knowing just the row that a
grave is in with get you close enough to find the grave in short order.
Let’s
move into the cemetery and make our first visit. We’ll go to that location
above, 01N-20-05-12. Turn north into the North Section on the road between rows
1 and 2. You’ll quickly come to a tall, narrow stone, the grave of Luther
French, the founding homesteader on the land that is Sutton. The French
homestead was bounded on the north by the old DLD road, the north edge of the
city park.
Families,
especially the early families can be found buried together. They seem to have
captured several adjacent gravesites planning ahead. Later that practice kind
of died out, so to speak. Several of the French family members are buried
nearby.
A
better illustration of a family burial plot is just to the north of the French
family where the extended family of Michael Leitner is buried marked by several
substantial red stones.
The
single largest category of noted burials is that of veterans. Various kinds of
markers mounted on small metal stakes identify veterans and the conflict in
which they served. Other organizations have copied that tradition and you can
spend some time finding and identifying all of those.
For
now, move just one row to the west to plot 02N-19-07-05 where one particular
veteran is buried, Leonard Jarrett on whose grave flies a small distinctive
flag bearing the stars and bars. Leonard Jarrett is one of two Confederate
veterans buried in the Sutton Cemetery. And yes, if that name sounds familiar,
his daughter was Sibyl Bernice Jarrett, long-time Sutton librarian and buried
near her father.
A collage of several of the organizational emblems that mark members graves. |
Let’s
make one more stop in the north section at 04N-24-05-03, the grave of WWII
veteran Paul V. Woller born 100 years ago this May 1st, science
teacher to a lot of us and Sutton School Principal for 30 years. And the
teacher I most credit for “getting through” to me.
Crossing
the entry road to the south section in 04S is the Olinger family buried in a
large “vault” reminiscent of the New Orleans cemeteries.
We
next visit grave site 05S-35-04-04 to another woman who holds a special place
for the Sutton Historical Society, Emma J. Gray. Emma and her husband John
built the two houses on North Way Avenue which house our museum. It is not a
coincidence that the historic house previously was called Aunt Emma’s Tea
House. Emma’s mother, Jane Wolcott is buried in this plot.
The
Grays were Sutton pioneers and John’s father Col. Hosea Gray of the 6th
Iowa Infantry in the Civil War is buried in this plot. Hosea was an early
Sutton attorney and partnered with his son in the lumber business.
There
are a number of distinct gravestones in the Sutton Cemetery and you’ll see
those as you drive through. And driving through isn’t a bad idea. A cemetery
tour can take the form of a drive in the country. From most parts of town.
You’ll barely break a full mile out and back and most names are readable from
the road, if not the inscriptions. But it is a better walk, or bike ride.
The
West section is to the back of the cemetery and is generally the more recent
graves. For the most part, early graves are nearer the road and dates become
more recent as you go west.
Jack Nolde's memorial to veterans is on the left; Mrs. Bender's flagpole dedicated to Major Johnny Bender on the right. |
Jack
Nolde left us another monument located on the border between the North and West
Sections where he donated a memorial to all veterans in 1940. The flagpole is
nearby with a plaque from Mrs. John R. Bender in honor of The Unknown Soldier
and in memory of her husband Major John R. Bender, a veteran of WWI and one of
Sutton’s very best known sports figures. Major Bender is buried in plot
10N-30-05-12
To
get you started on noticing distinctive stones visit plot 02W-02-05-03 where
the Sack family set an attractive family stone that is partially sculptured
leaving about ½ with the appearance of raw stone. I like it. Would it be asking
too much to suggest that this design was inspired by Michelangelo’s Unfinished
Slaves series in Florence, Italy?
Let's hear it for the Sack family - great design. |
Some
people have taken a lighter approach, even humor when selecting a grave stone.
You’ll find a stone with a little boy fishing, some farming scenes, trucks,
pictures and a few clever comments. A visit to the cemetery is what you make
it. Enjoy yourself.
You
can also take a tour of the Sutton Cemetery and nearly every other cemetery
from your easy chair. The web site findagrave.com contains memorials for over
112 million people in most of the cemeteries in the country and a growing
number overseas. A separate effort has added photographs of many of these
gravesites available, as I said, from your easy chair.
The
Sutton Cemetery at findagrave.com lists 3,651 memorials and about 95% have been
photographed (that project was interrupted by winter – I’ll push that photographed
number up in a few weeks though many that remain are unmarked and/or of unknown
location.)
Findagrave.com
lists more than 30 cemeteries in Clay County from those with just a handful of
burials to the 3,600+ in both Harvard and Sutton. Farmers Valley Cemetery is
probably the most famous in the area. The two Verona cemeteries are a good
story. The Swedes are buried on the southwest corner of the intersection, the
Danes on the northeast. The Saronville Lutherans are ½ mile east of town, the
Methodists another ½ mile to the east and a bit north.
Sutton’s Catholic Cemetery is well south of town, the city cemetery to the north. Grafton has one cemetery, Catholics south of the road, Protestants on the north side.
Volunteers
are also working to add more information about the deceased at findagrave.com.
Parents, spouses, children and siblings can be identified as well as a
biography. Bios often are obituaries but any form of bio can be added. These
volunteers can use help to fill out the memorials and becoming a member of the
site is simple enough. Contact Jerry Johnson for information.
Cemeteries
can often be a feature of your travel plans. New Orleans cemeteries, as I
mentioned earlier are all above ground as the high water table… well, it’s a
problem.
The
military sections of cemeteries can be particularly interesting. The Key West
cemetery has a separate section for the seamen killed when the Battleship Maine
sunk in Havana Harbor in 1898. The Punchbowl is a cemetery in Honolulu with a
common Date of Death for many graves, December 7, 1941. A powerful image.
This article first appeared in the March, 2014 issue of Sutton Life Magazine. Contact Jarod Griess at 402-984-4203 or neighborhoodlife@yahoo.com for more information. Or LIKE Mustang Media, Inc. on Facebook.
Mr. Johnson, the Sutton Cemetery really is a beautiful resting place for many. You did a very nice job of writing this article about it I think that anybody who reads the article would be appreciate. Thanks for your efforts in this endeavor.
ReplyDeleteI've just tried to access the link for the directory at the Sutton Cemetery and it doesn't seem to be working. Could you check? Thank you. Dee Radek
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed the article. My mother's, Gloria Schleiger's, mother, Elizabeth, was a Sack. Philips Sack, Jr., helped put my mother through college. So, I remember fondly the Sack family monument. Lots of good memories on Memorial Day weekends in Sutton - eating my Aunt Grace (Mohnike), Schleiger's fried chicken, running up what we thought was the big hill in the park to the cannon, swimming in the swimming pool. Good times with family. Jim Story
ReplyDelete