| Marion County's first burial ground for white settlers,
located on the campus of the Indiana University Medical Center, will
receive a permament marker within the next few weeks.
The tiny cemetery, brought about ironically by a wave of
contagion on a site that was destined to become one of the outstanding
centers in the nation for preservation of health, came near being the
burial ground for the entire city of Indianapolis.
Article Revives Interest
Discovered 10 years ago when
landscaping was in progress on the medical center camps, the cemetery
was set aside by a group of small evergreen trees. Interest in it was
revived recently when Dr. Thurman B. Rice, member of the faculty of the
Indiana University school of medicine, published an article on the
history of the medical center in the Quarterly Bulletin of the school.
Announcement that a permanent
marker would be installed was made by Dr. W. D. Gatch, dean of the
medical school, and James W. Carr, secretary of the James Whitcomb
Riley Memorial Association.
The wave of contagion which
resulted in the burial ground came in 1821 and nearly wiped out the
community. Dr. Rice points out in his article that Fall creek then
followed a course along the present site of James Whitcomb Riley
Hospital for Children and the Robert H. Long Hospital. The settlers
choose this location partly because of a sawmill constructed by Robert
Barnhill, great-grandfather of Dr. John Barnhill, professor emeritus of
otolaryngology of the school of medicine, and Isaac Wilson.
Epidemic Believed Malaria
"It is likely that this area would
have become the downtown district of the city -- a most unfortunate
choice because of the danger of floods, had there not arisen in 1821 a
dreadful epidemic," Dr. Rice wrote. "Nearly everyone was ill and a
large proportion of the population died during that terrible summer.
Concerning the exact nature of the disease we can only guess, but it
probably was malaria as we may judge by the fact that it showed
intermittent chills and fevers and stopped abruptly with the coming of
cold weather."
As the disease took the lives of
the approximately 100 citizens a burial ground was sought and "a
pleasant knoll on the bluff overlooking Fall creek was chosen." This
knoll continued to be on "the bluff overlooking Fall creek" until 1973,
when the course of the creek was changed. In the process of landscaping
the campus 10 years ago several headstones were uncovered and it was
feared that open graves would be unearthed, but none appeared.
Discovery of the burial ground
brought back memories among old-timers of conditions that were not so
far removed from the primitive times of the settlers. The site of City
Hospital was chosen, Dr. Rice pointed out, because "in those days it
was supposed that it would be dangerous to locate the hospital in the
city proper. It was believed that disease would spread from it as a
focus. Furthermore, hospitals smelled bad and so it was decided to put
it some distance away from the city proper, and inasmuch as the
bottomland near the river was a most unhealthful and unattractive spot,
no harm could be done."
Streets "Terrible" Unlighted
The streets to the hospital in
those days were "terrible" and unlighted, Dr. Rice wrote, but a doctor
losing his way "just followed his nose." Dr. Barnhill recalls that
Indiana avenue was a "slough of despond."
Yet the present medical center
campus, beautiful and modernized, is not so far removed from the era of
mud and floods. Dr. Rice points out that only six or seven years ago
the area was an eye-sore.
"The changes which have taken
place are almost beyond belief," he wrote. "An enormous fill was needed
and the material available was mostly ashes, blocks of broken concrete,
trash of all sorts, automobile bodies and tin cans. In summer the place
was overgrown with weeds and in the winter the mud was terrible. There
were no trees and grass. A great pond of black, dirty water was dammed
up in North street. The students dubbed it "Lake Neff," therefore
"honoring" Robert E. Neff, the administrator, and later "Thompson's
bayou," again "honoring" the administrator. Still later it became
"Roland's Pond." At least the place has been made a beaty spot ..."
Location of Cemetery
The burial ground is about 150
north of the medical school building and adjoins Barnhill drive, which
was named for Dr. Barnhill and his ancestors. It is southeast of Riley
Hospital. The early life of the Hoosier poet is woven into the area,
although the selection of the site of the hospital had nothing to do
with this.
The Samuel J. Patterson homestead
stood just north of the burial ground. Riley was a relative of the
Pattersons and as a boy visited and played around the homestead. Years
later a great hospital was to be built in his memory near the spot, not
because of the location of the homestead, but because of his poems and
because the City Hospital, greatly enlarged and established despite its
dubious start in life, formed the nucleus for a medical center.
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