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THIRD STREET CEMETERY: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:thirdstreet.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Land behind this chain link fence was once the Third Street Cemetery.]]THIRD STREET CEMETERY. Also known as the "Kelly's Bluff Cemetery," the site was located on the bluff between Third Street and Dodge in an area bordered by Cardiff, Third, and St. Mary [[STREETS]]. Between 1839 and 1856, records of the archdiocese indicated that 819 people were buried in the cemetery, but the records were suspect. Miners attempted to secure the right to dig under the cemetery for [[LEAD]]. (1)
[[Image:thirdstreet.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Land behind this chain link fence was once the Third Street Cemetery.]]THIRD STREET CEMETERY. An abandoned cemetery, also known as the “Kelly's Bluff Cemetery,” “The Old Catholic Cemetery,” or “St. Raphael’s Cemetery.” The site is located on the bluff between Third Street and Dodge in an area bordered by Cardiff, Third, and St. Mary Streets. The cemetery was used by the Catholic community of Dubuque from the 1830s until around 1880. The number of people interred in the graveyard was estimated by a contemporary at 3000-4000 in 1870. By the time the burial ground fell out of use, 5000-6000 may have been interred there. An incomplete funeral register from St. Raphael’s Cathedral (1839 to 1856) provides the names of almost 700 parishioners who may have been buried at Third Street. (1)


The dead were mostly poor Irish, German, French, and Czech immigrants. Some of the graves displayed ancient Irish traditional burial practice. The head faced the west and the feet to the east so that the dead would be ready to arise from their graves facing the sunrise on judgment day. During the [[CHOLERA]] epidemic, some parents buried their dead quickly without telling the priest. In other cases, newcomers to the city died and were buried before their names were known.  By 1856 the Third Street Cemetery was filled with cholera victims, the same year that the Key West Burial Ground, [[MOUNT  OLIVET CEMETERY]], was opened. Archbishop [[KEANE, John J.|John J. KEANE]] decided to abandon the cemetery which was no longer used. He wanted all burials done at the Key West site and assembled a Cemetery Association to plan and manage it.  The abandoned property was planned as a recreation area for seminary students. (2)
A few entries in the St. Raphael’s register indicate that people had been buried without the families paying for the lots or notifying the clergy. Some of these were recent arrivals in the city and some had died of [[CHOLERA]]. These entries, which account for only 28 of the deaths listed in the register, gave rise to exaggerated stories of surreptitious burials and cholera-related mass graves in the bluff-top cemetery. (2)


Early in 1870 the members of St. Raphael's, St. Mary's and St. Patrick's churches and of St. Raphael's Cemetery Association petitioned the council to surrender to them the cemetery on Third street in view of their right to the same under the claim of Patrick Quigley. After consideration the council stated that the title to the cemetery was in the city, but the grounds would not be disturbed unless satisfactory to the Catholics.  
Though Bishop John Hennessy officially closed the cemetery in 1867, he re-opened it in 1868, after he obtained legal title to Outlot 723, to the west of the original cemetery lot. This western outlot had been used for burials for an unknown number of years, and officially became part of the cemetery after the death of the original owner, Thomas Kelly. Though the addition almost doubled the size of the burial ground, the newer section is not shown as part of the cemetery on any city maps. In 1870, the Third Street Cemetery became the center of controversy when the City Council leased out the mineral rights to the original lot, ignoring the outcry of the Catholic community. Despite these circumstances, the burial ground continued to be used for another decade. The last documented interment (recorded in the city death records) occurred in 1880. (3)


[[Image:marker1.jpg|right|thumb|250px|]]In 1959 an old graveyard marker was uncovered that was believed to have come from the cemetery. Hand-carved and made of Farley stone, the stone carried no inscription.  The post weighed between 400-500 pounds and was six feet long and fourteen inches on each side.
The cemetery was not officially closed after 1880, and the Archdiocese never issued an order for the removal of the remains. Turn-of-the-century newspaper articles about the new cemetery, [[MOUNT OLIVET CEMETERY]], mention plans to move the graves from Third Street, but there is no record that these removals ever happened. Individual families disinterred their loved ones from the bluff over time, but the majority of the graves remained. By the 1930s, though, the community believed only a few graves still existed. (4)


Hints that not all the bodies had been moved began in 2007 when a man and his dog discovered a human bone. In September 2009, developer A.J. Spiegel sued a group of Dominican religious sisters claiming that they did not reveal that the property they sold to him contained hundred of additional bodies. In 2005 Spiegel's Royal Oaks Development paid $1.5 million for the former St. Dominic Villa so that a condominium development could be started.  Initial construction was stopped when between 600-700 burials with human body parts were discovered by archaeologists between 2007 and 2008.  
In 1946, the property was sold to the Sininsawa Dominicans, who built the Saint Dominic Villa to the south of the cemetery lots. Eleven or twelve graves were removed from the Third Street Cemetery at this time, and reinterred in the Third Street section of Mt. Olivet Cemetery. According to eyewitness testimony gathered during depositions for a lawsuit concerning the property, many more graves were destroyed during the creation of a lawn for the Villa around 1948.  In the late 1960s, the Dominican sisters sold the portions of the cemetery property closest to Third Street. More graves were disturbed during the construction of Kelly’s Bluff Condominiums in the 1970s, and during landscaping on private property in 1994. (5)
 
[[Image:marker1.jpg|right|thumb|250px|]]In 1959 an old graveyard marker was uncovered that was believed to have come from the cemetery. Hand-carved and made of Farley stone, the stone carried no inscription.  The post weighed between 400-500 pounds and was six feet long and fourteen inches on each side. (6)
 
The remaining Villa property was sold in 2002 for $1.5 million to A. J. Spiegel whose Spiegel's Royal Oaks Development was planning a condominium development on the site. In 2007, after earth-moving activities, exposed human bones were discovered on the property. A team from the Office of the State Archaeologist, University of Iowa, excavated over 900 burials from the approximately one-fourth of the cemetery between 2007 and 2011. However, some graves still remained on the bluff. (7) A. J. Spiegel paid for all body-recovery costs estimated at $1,000 for each of the 900 found. (8) In September 2009, developer A.J. Spiegel sued a group of Dominican religious sisters claiming that they did not reveal that the property they sold to him contained additional graves. (9) The human remains were reburied in the Third Street Cemetery section of Mt. Olivet Cemetery, with the last graveside service taking place in September 2013. (10)


In November 2010, workers continued to uncover human remains from the site. By that time, an estimated nine hundred more burials had been discovered than had been previously known.  Pat Leonard, superintendent of Mount Olivet Catholic Cemetery, was supervising the reburials at Mount Olivet. A. J. Spiegel paid for all body-recovery costs estimated at $1,000 for each of the 900 found.


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Source:
Source:
1. "Bioarchaeology and History of Dubuque's Third Street Cemetery, 13DB476, Dubuque County, Iowa," Office of the State Archaeologist, Research Paper Volume 37, Number 1, 2013. Authors Robin M. Lillie and Jennifer E. Mack.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid.
7. Ibid.


1. Oldt, Franklin T. History of Dubuque County. http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/franklin-t-oldt/history-of-dubuque-county-iowa-being-a-general-survey-of-dubuque-county-histor-tdl/page-19-history-of-dubuque-county-iowa-being-a-general-survey-of-dubuque-county-histor-tdl.shtml  
1. Oldt, Franklin T. History of Dubuque County. http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/franklin-t-oldt/history-of-dubuque-county-iowa-being-a-general-survey-of-dubuque-county-histor-tdl/page-19-history-of-dubuque-county-iowa-being-a-general-survey-of-dubuque-county-histor-tdl.shtml  


2. Gallagher, Mary Kevin. Seed/Harvest: A History of the Archdiocese of Dubuque. Dubuque: Archdiocese of Dubuque Press, 1987, p. 62


Pederson, Mary Nevans, "Bodies on Top of Bodies," Telegraph Herald, Nov. 16, 2010
Pederson, Mary Nevans, "Bodies on Top of Bodies," Telegraph Herald, Nov. 16, 2010

Revision as of 21:41, 4 November 2013

Land behind this chain link fence was once the Third Street Cemetery.

THIRD STREET CEMETERY. An abandoned cemetery, also known as the “Kelly's Bluff Cemetery,” “The Old Catholic Cemetery,” or “St. Raphael’s Cemetery.” The site is located on the bluff between Third Street and Dodge in an area bordered by Cardiff, Third, and St. Mary Streets. The cemetery was used by the Catholic community of Dubuque from the 1830s until around 1880. The number of people interred in the graveyard was estimated by a contemporary at 3000-4000 in 1870. By the time the burial ground fell out of use, 5000-6000 may have been interred there. An incomplete funeral register from St. Raphael’s Cathedral (1839 to 1856) provides the names of almost 700 parishioners who may have been buried at Third Street. (1)

A few entries in the St. Raphael’s register indicate that people had been buried without the families paying for the lots or notifying the clergy. Some of these were recent arrivals in the city and some had died of CHOLERA. These entries, which account for only 28 of the deaths listed in the register, gave rise to exaggerated stories of surreptitious burials and cholera-related mass graves in the bluff-top cemetery. (2)

Though Bishop John Hennessy officially closed the cemetery in 1867, he re-opened it in 1868, after he obtained legal title to Outlot 723, to the west of the original cemetery lot. This western outlot had been used for burials for an unknown number of years, and officially became part of the cemetery after the death of the original owner, Thomas Kelly. Though the addition almost doubled the size of the burial ground, the newer section is not shown as part of the cemetery on any city maps. In 1870, the Third Street Cemetery became the center of controversy when the City Council leased out the mineral rights to the original lot, ignoring the outcry of the Catholic community. Despite these circumstances, the burial ground continued to be used for another decade. The last documented interment (recorded in the city death records) occurred in 1880. (3)

The cemetery was not officially closed after 1880, and the Archdiocese never issued an order for the removal of the remains. Turn-of-the-century newspaper articles about the new cemetery, MOUNT OLIVET CEMETERY, mention plans to move the graves from Third Street, but there is no record that these removals ever happened. Individual families disinterred their loved ones from the bluff over time, but the majority of the graves remained. By the 1930s, though, the community believed only a few graves still existed. (4)

In 1946, the property was sold to the Sininsawa Dominicans, who built the Saint Dominic Villa to the south of the cemetery lots. Eleven or twelve graves were removed from the Third Street Cemetery at this time, and reinterred in the Third Street section of Mt. Olivet Cemetery. According to eyewitness testimony gathered during depositions for a lawsuit concerning the property, many more graves were destroyed during the creation of a lawn for the Villa around 1948. In the late 1960s, the Dominican sisters sold the portions of the cemetery property closest to Third Street. More graves were disturbed during the construction of Kelly’s Bluff Condominiums in the 1970s, and during landscaping on private property in 1994. (5)

Marker1.jpg

In 1959 an old graveyard marker was uncovered that was believed to have come from the cemetery. Hand-carved and made of Farley stone, the stone carried no inscription. The post weighed between 400-500 pounds and was six feet long and fourteen inches on each side. (6)

The remaining Villa property was sold in 2002 for $1.5 million to A. J. Spiegel whose Spiegel's Royal Oaks Development was planning a condominium development on the site. In 2007, after earth-moving activities, exposed human bones were discovered on the property. A team from the Office of the State Archaeologist, University of Iowa, excavated over 900 burials from the approximately one-fourth of the cemetery between 2007 and 2011. However, some graves still remained on the bluff. (7) A. J. Spiegel paid for all body-recovery costs estimated at $1,000 for each of the 900 found. (8) In September 2009, developer A.J. Spiegel sued a group of Dominican religious sisters claiming that they did not reveal that the property they sold to him contained additional graves. (9) The human remains were reburied in the Third Street Cemetery section of Mt. Olivet Cemetery, with the last graveside service taking place in September 2013. (10)


---

Source:

1. "Bioarchaeology and History of Dubuque's Third Street Cemetery, 13DB476, Dubuque County, Iowa," Office of the State Archaeologist, Research Paper Volume 37, Number 1, 2013. Authors Robin M. Lillie and Jennifer E. Mack.

2. Ibid.

3. Ibid.

4. Ibid.

5. Ibid.

6. Ibid.

7. Ibid.

1. Oldt, Franklin T. History of Dubuque County. http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/franklin-t-oldt/history-of-dubuque-county-iowa-being-a-general-survey-of-dubuque-county-histor-tdl/page-19-history-of-dubuque-county-iowa-being-a-general-survey-of-dubuque-county-histor-tdl.shtml


Pederson, Mary Nevans, "Bodies on Top of Bodies," Telegraph Herald, Nov. 16, 2010