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<DIV>Hopefully they can get a group together and restore the cemetery, the Clark County Genealogical Society is looking into doing that at the Old Vancouver City Cemetery.</DIV>
<DIV>Glen</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV class=signature id=signature>--<BR>Glen A. Jones</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">-------------- Original message -------------- <BR>From: EugeneMelvin.roots@comcast.net <BR><BR>> I got this email on another list I subscribed to. It is about the Snohomish <BR>> Cemetery. It sounds like this cemetery really needs some TLC. It is my hope <BR>> that we do not have any such stories hiding around here in Oregon. <BR>> <BR>> Eugene <BR>> <BR>> From: "Carroll Clark" <W7IML@GTE.NET><BR>> To: PSRoots-L@rootsweb.com <BR>> Subject: [PSRoots] Some SNOHOMISH CEMETERY History: <BR>> Date: Friday, March 17, 2006 12:33:18 PM <BR>> <BR>> This is an article by Jenny Zuvela, Staff Writer for The Snohomish County <BR>> TRIBUNE, with permission to copy the following from the Editor of SC TRIBUNE and <BR>> from Jenny Zuvela, quoted in full (Vol. 117, Number 11 for Wed. March 15, 2006): <BR>> <BR>> The cemetery's history . . . By Jenny Zuvela <BR>> <BR>> The old pioneers buried at the former Snohomish Cemetery on Cypress <BR>> Avenue may be able to rest in peace, descendants say, now that the city has <BR>> abandoned plans to build a senior center on the site. <BR>> <BR>> The history of the cemetery over the last 120 years is difficult to put <BR>> together, as records are often missing and memories sometimes conflict. City <BR>> staff and archeologists have compiled the following history. <BR>> <BR>> The land overlooking the Pilchuck River became an official cemetery in <BR>> 1876. For centuries before that, it is believed the land was an American Indian <BR>> burial ground. The cemetery served the communities of Snohomish and surrounding <BR>> towns until the Grand Army of the Republic Cemetery* was opened - the first <BR>> recorded burial was in 1898. Soon after, the Snohomish Cemetery board <BR>> disbanded. The last recorded burial was Pilchuck Julia in 1923.** <BR>> <BR>> From 1923 to 1947, newspapers reported repeated acts of vandalism and <BR>> mischief at the abandoned cemetery. A number of families relocated the remains <BR>> or headstones to other locations during that period, but no one known how many. <BR>> <BR>> In 1947, the state built a highway, now Second Street, through the <BR>> cemetery and split it into two portions. The state moved 111 remains to the GAR <BR>> Cemetery, and relatives have removed and relocated others throughout the <BR>> decades. <BR>> <BR>> The Snohomish Historical Society*** created a pioneer village in part of <BR>> the north section of the cemetery in the '70s. The pioneer village is now <BR>> closed indefinitely for repairs. <BR>> <BR>> Community groups periodically tried to clean up the cemetery in the '60s <BR>> and '70s. At some point one group removed about 60 headstones for cleaning, <BR>> which were never returned. <BR>> <BR>> The Snohomish Seniors moved a salmon-pink farmhouse**** onto the <BR>> property in 1991 to serve as a senior center, although a state law had been <BR>> passed that allowed only buildings for cemetery use to be built on graveyards <BR>> unless the land was decertified. The city acquired the land for $5,000 in 1996, <BR>> and the vision of a joint senior and youth center was born. <BR>> <BR>> The city hired Northwest Archeological Associates in 1997 to determine how many <BR>> graves existed. Using non-invasive methods, they found one burial and two <BR>> possible grave shafts. <BR>> <BR>> Descendants of pioneers buried in the old cemetery and the Tulalip <BR>> Tribes objected to the plans to build a new senior center. To avoid a trial, <BR>> the city and the Tribes entered into an agreement that imposed a number of <BR>> conditions on the city. Specifically, the city had to search for and identify <BR>> as best they could all human remains on the property and turn American Indian <BR>> remains over to the Tribes. The city expected to find only a few remains. <BR>> <BR>> From August to December 2005, archeologists dug up the cemetery and <BR>> found 96 spots that contained human remains. Based on the unexpectedly high <BR>> number and escalating costs, the City Council on March 7 decided not to <BR>> construct a senior center on the property. <BR>> <BR>> The future of the old cemetery remains uncertain, but it's clear no one <BR>> can build on the land unless the remains were removed and the cemetery was <BR>> decertified. <BR>> <BR>> END OF THIS QUOTED ARTICLE by the Snohomish County TRIBUNE <BR>> <BR>> * * * 30 * * * <BR>> <BR>> COMMENT: <BR>> <BR>> * G.A.R. or Grand Army of the Republic is located outside the city limits of <BR>> Snohomish and to the West on 2nd Street. <BR>> <BR>> ** There is a beautiful pink colored marble in memorial of Pilchuck out at <BR>> G.A.R. and is located near the administrative building. <BR>> <BR>> It was placed there when Val Zalewski oversaw the GAR cemetery and felt <BR>> it fitting to have a memorial for Pilchuck Julia, the last of the Pilchuck or <BR>> Pillchuck Tribe of the Snohomish area to be. <BR>> <BR>> The fact that there is a memorial stone should not be inferred that her <BR>> remains were taken out for burial at the GAR. <BR>> <BR>> There would have to be a confirmation of that having taken place. Late <BR>> Vic Mathisien (sp/?) of Snohomish was witness to her burial at Snohomish <BR>> cemetery in 1923; he was age 13 at that time. <BR>> <BR>> Vic, also, told me that when the wagons (horse drawn and or powered) <BR>> delivering/picking up milk in those early times, bottles of booze would be <BR>> stashed behind the tombstones for "pickup" stations. Vandals hadn't overturned <BR>> tombstones as yet. <BR>> <BR>> * * * From whom did the Snohomish Historical Society gain the permission, who <BR>> was responsible for putting the various buildings, including a log cabin that <BR>> was transported from near the Centennial Trail parking areas just outside of the <BR>> City Limits of Snohomish, along with known buildings from various parts of the <BR>> city, all of which were placed on top of a known Cemetery site smaller portion, <BR>> just North of the Hwy 2 cut, or now 2nd street. <BR>> <BR>> What is the difference of the house place on top of the Cemetery, and <BR>> designated a senior center, and the various buildings, plus the tombstones <BR>> removed from the main portion of the Cemetery to be place at the "pioneer <BR>> village" site. All are on top of a designated cemetery that had not, and has <BR>> not been decertified. <BR>> <BR>> Who will bare the responsibility for the "village" if the cemetery - all <BR>> of it - Parcels A, B, and C. or the North Portion and the South Portions on <BR>> either side of the 1947 Hwy 2 Cut, now Second Street are not decertified? <BR>> <BR>> * * * * This house was not salmon-pink house when it was moved on top of <BR>> Snohomish Cemetery, but was painted salmon-pink, and blacktop for parking was <BR>> laid down on top of the Cemetery, even over in the approximate area where <BR>> Pilchuck Julia had been buried. <BR>> <BR>> Later, the building was found to be too small for the many activities <BR>> that had grown with increased number of members, so about 30 feet was added on <BR>> in an Easterly direction onto the original house. The corner of that 30 ft <BR>> extension was where there were about two large trees close to the NE corner of <BR>> the extended building where 3 sandstone bases, and 1 finished granite, <BR>> reddish/pink in color was the THOMAS base stone I saw many times and pointed it <BR>> out to various persons over the years. <BR>> <BR>> Restoration of the Cemetery as a Cemetery of record, not decertified in <BR>> whole or part, except for the 80 ft. wide swath through the Northern portion of <BR>> it, leaving a small Northern portion that is a certified Cemetery, that has a <BR>> number of buildings on top of it, and may contain remains in addition to those <BR>> found so far will be something for the Future to be realized. <BR>> <BR>> Now the city is beginning to call Snohomish Cemetery a "private <BR>> cemetery" - what does this translate to? Many were "confused" that there were <BR>> still remains in the Cemetery, yet the Snohomish Historical Society stated on <BR>> page 55 of its publication, River Reflections that there were remains on both <BR>> sides of the highway cut through it. <BR>> <BR>> Common sense would preclude that the whole Cemetery was never dug up or <BR>> exhumed completely. Yet, there were so many that were "surprised" by the <BR>> findings of the archeological digs, and exploration. Time certainly does Tell, <BR>> and always to our benefit as we encounter the Hurdles along the Way. "They want <BR>> to be found" seems to apply our Genealogical History. <BR>> <BR>> May the New Snohomish Senior Center makes up for lost time, and thrive <BR>> as a fine, new addition to our history of Snohomish's Historical District. It <BR>> certainly has our Blessings for Success and Soon! <BR>> <BR>> Carroll in Snohomish <BR>> <BR>> * * * 30 * * * <BR>> _______________________________________________ <BR>> or-roots mailing list <BR>> or-roots@sosinet.sos.state.or.us <BR>> http://sosinet.sos.state.or.us/mailman/listinfo/or-roots </BLOCKQUOTE></body></html>