An
Analysis of the Barker Museum’s Forest Hill Cemetery Association Reports
by Douglas Shepard, 2013
The Barker Historical Museum has at
least one copy each of the printed Annual Reports for 1873, 1878, 1888, 1893,
1900 and 1915. The dates suggest there may have been a deliberate five-year
interval between (assuming there was an 1883 issue) at least in the 19th
Century. A search of the Cemetery Board’s Minutes should make that clear.
Each printed report contains a list of
the lot owners. The 1873 edition has a brief history, “origin of the
Association.” The reports of 1878 and 1888 simply repeat that history. The 1893
edition has a much longer “History of Forest Hill Cemetery,” written by the
President of the Association, Willard McKinstry,
which gives more detail about the origins of the Cemetery and the Association.
It was repeated in the 1900 and 1915 editions.
The 1915 version adds a note that the
Trustees bought 10 and 4/100 acres from the Barker estate on 22 March 1911 and
58/100 acre on Newton St. from Mrs. Catherine M. Fagan on 7 November 1914. That increased the grounds from about 24
to some 34 acres. These two latter purchases gave the Cemetery more frontage on
Newton St. to the north and east. (The street to the east was then called
Glisan St.)
The earlier history explains that soon
after the original nine acres were dedicated in 1855, Sections A and C were
laid out into family lots. (The grounds originally covered only what are now
called Sections A-H.) Section C lies immediately north of the office building
(later the site of the Chapel), and Section A is immediately north of that,
both running along the Lambert (then Free) St. side.
The 1893 history adds the information
that in 1855 Lucius Hurlbut visited
other “modern” cemeteries, then plotted the ground and mapped Sections A, B and
C. “Most of the lots mapped were with curved lines adapted to the topography of
the ground.” (Another factor must have been the trend at the time toward
park-like burial grounds with meandering lanes and many trees.)
The history goes on to explain that as
more lots were sold and finances improved, new sections were laid out. In
February 1870 the Association bought the old Fairgrounds.
Walter
Scott surveyed it and made a map
showing the entire Cemetery. The history says the map shows the Cemetery
divided into 24 sections comprising 1,634 lots. That is not accurate. The map
actually shows the Cemetery divided into 21 sections comprising 1,788 lots, or
1,790 if Sections H and Q, very small unnumbered parcels, are included. There
are several oddities about the map. Section E actually extends into the bottom
half of what appears to be Section G. Where the numbering reaches the dividing
path, some lot numbers are omitted. The other oddity is that the lot numbers in
G begin with the number 2.
In the list of Lot Owners in the 1873
volume only Sections A-G, K and 0 are in use.
There
were maps glued to the inside back cover of each printed Report, although some
have since been detached. The same 1873 map was repeated for each of the
Reports through 1900, although the lists of Lot Owners in the editions of 1888,
1893 and 1900 include sections not shown on the 1873 map. In addition, although
the two gatehouses were built and functioning by 1896, the map in the 1900
edition still refers to the greenhouse and the Sexton’s residence/office which had been replaced.
In the 1893 list of Lot Owners, and
thereafter, there is a “Soldiers’ Section” given just after Section C. It is
described as lying south of C and running east. In his “history” McKinstry refers to the 112 Civil War
veterans buried in Forest Hill Cemetery as of 1893. However, none is buried in
the “Soldiers’ Section.”
After the purchase of the additional
acreage in 1911 and 1914, the new grounds were laid out, some of the old sections
were reconfigured and a new map was prepared by George E. Troupe of Buffalo and the revised map was engraved by the
Matthews-Northrup Works of Buffalo.
However, the map still refers to the
greenhouse and the residence/office. One significant addition is names for the
various roads through the Cemetery. The section changes are complicated.
Because the Cemetery now reached to Newton St. on the east, a fence was run
along that side with another entrance about at the middle of the fence. It led
directly into what was now called Highland Ave.
The unmarked oval above K and L was
replaced by Section J. Section M was expanded into a full circle and
renumbered. Above M, a small circle, GG, was inserted. Section T was
reconfigured into multiple lots and renumbered. A small part of T at the
northern end was made into FF. A large Section AA was established east of T, as
well as a new Section TT.
Above
Highland Ave. was put an L-shaped Section BB, west of that CC and DD. Above DD
and to its west was placed Section EE.
On the south, bordering Pioneer
Cemetery, Section S was further subdivided and renamed SS. A small triangular
section of S near Section 0 was kept with its original numbers, interrupted
where the rest of S had been changed. That left grave lots 1-12 and 71-91 in S.
The
Soldiers’ Section south of Section C remained in the list of Lot Owners, with
the same names as in 1893, although it is not shown on this 1915 map either. It
seems to refer to the blank, unnumbered section at the southwest end of Section
E. The Lot Owners listing for this section is the same in the 1893, 1900 and
1915 volumes. The entries and lot numbers are: Baldwin, William, 2; Brosch,
Henry,4; Emerson, Elizabeth A., 8; Fairless, Richard, 5; Holt, John, 6; Harmer, Harriet G., 9; Harrington,
Thomas, 1; and Rogers, Edward, 3.
This seems to indicate there were at least nine lots, all sold except number 7.
[Lot 7 was sold 24 March 1874.] [Lot 10 is in the roadway according to the Lot
book.]