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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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THIRD STREET CEMETERY: Difference between revisions

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The dead were mostly poor Irish, German, French, and Czech immigrants.  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.
The dead were mostly poor Irish, German, French, and Czech immigrants.  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.


The Third Street Cemetery was filled with cholera victims by 1856, the same year that the Key West Burial Ground [[MOUNT  OLIVET]] was opened. The Third Street Cemetery was closed in 1867 and all the known graves were moved to Mount Olivet.
The Third Street Cemetery was filled with cholera victims by 1856, the same year that the Key West Burial Ground, [[MOUNT  OLIVET CEMETERY]], was opened. The Third Street Cemetery was closed in 1867 and all the known graves were moved to Mount Olivet.


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 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.  

Revision as of 02:34, 30 March 2010

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

THIRD STREET CEMETERY. Abandoned 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.

The dead were mostly poor Irish, German, French, and Czech immigrants. 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.

The Third Street Cemetery was filled with cholera victims by 1856, the same year that the Key West Burial Ground, MOUNT OLIVET CEMETERY, was opened. The Third Street Cemetery was closed in 1867 and all the known graves were moved to Mount Olivet.

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.