(Whitesell Cemetery)
Indianapolis Star
June 4, 2008
Contributed by Bob Alloway
Pioneers graves were dug Monday
they same way they were 150 years ago -- by hand.
With headstones and footstones facing west in the exact configuration
as their original burial site, remains of 33 people from the
Wright-Gentry-Whitesell Cemetery were being put to rest for a second
time in the pioneer cemetery at Crown Hill Cemetery.
After an intense study, remains were released from the University of
Indianapolis on Friday, said Megan Tsai, INDOT spokeswoman. To curb
anxiety, burial took place as soon as possible. Forensic findings will
be released toward the end of summer.
In the hot June sun, workers from the Indiana Department of
Transportation, AMEC, Crown Hill and the University of Indianapolis
used shovels, post hole diggers and augers to dig graves for the
remains that were moved from the original cemetery plot to make way for
highway expansion in 2012.
Established in 1841, the Whitesell Cemetery was in the 8000 block of
Castleton Drive. The move is estimated to cost $400,000. The remains
from Whitesell will join those from Greenlawn and Rhoads cemeteries in
the pioneer cemetery at Crown Hill.
By lunchtime Monday, about 10 shafts were complete, with work expected
to be completed by the end of Tuesday, said Shaun Miller, INDOT senior
archaeological supervisor.
"Work is going great," Miller
said. "We're moving quicker than anticipated."
The adult graves measure 2 feet
wide, 4 feet long and 4 feet deep, and children's graves are smaller,
Miller said. While the first foot and a half was easy to dig, workers
hit clay and rocks deeper down and needed to use pickaxes and crowbars
to bust through the rocks.
Marty Davis, public relations coordinator at Crown Hill, sees the move
of the Whitesell cemetery as a continuation of the beginning of Crown
Hill.
"Crown Hill started because of Greenlawn closing," Davis said.
Most families purchased plots at
Crown Hill and moved bodies, Davis said.
For those who didn't, Greenlawn Cemetery's remains were the first to be
part of the pioneer cemetery, he said.
Established in 1823, more than
1,160 pioneers were buried in Greenlawn.
Greenlawn was Indianapolis' first cemetery. Rhoads Cemetery was the
original burial site for five pioneer families -- 12 adults and 34
children.
Unlike the first two sites, the
Wright-Gentry-Whitesell Cemetery had head and footstones. Just as for
Greenlawn and Rhodes, a marker will be erected telling the history of
the Whitesell Cemetery, with a map of the burial sites.
Davis said the headstones are
exactly like those at Whitesell.
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