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Small, Old Cemeteries Have Stories To Tell

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  • Small, Old Cemeteries Have Stories To Tell

    SMALL, OLD CEMETERIES HAVE STORIES TO TELL
    By Joe Holleman, [email protected]

    St. Louis Post-Dispatch
    United States
    09/18/2007

    The Paddock Cemetery in Moro off Illinois State Route 159.

    Here's hoping that the dead find peace in the fact that loved ones
    are taking care of their final resting places.

    After asking readers to alert us to small, interesting cemeteries in
    the area, 30 of you named about 50 burial grounds.

    But there are many - many - more.

    According to the St. Louis Genealogical Society, there are more than
    400 cemeteries in St. Louis and St. Louis County, most with 100 graves
    or less.

    We chose three burial grounds for a closer look: the Allen Cemetery in
    Eureka, the Urmenia in Chesterfield and the Paddock Cemetery in Moro.

    PADDOCK

    About six miles north of Edwardsville in a land where cornfields and
    subdivisions checker the ground, a small cemetery sits just east of
    Highway 159 in a town called Moro.

    The stones are surrounded by a rusted iron fence nailed to weathered
    wooden posts. Such a small place for so much history and so much
    beauty.

    "I'll pick up a couple of friends and drive over for a visit. It's
    a very peaceful site," said Sally Flagg Haake, who now lives in
    St. Charles.

    "In fact, my mother tells the story that on the day before I was born,
    the family had a picnic under the trees."

    The ground was set aside by Gaius Paddock, a Revolutionary War veteran
    from Massachusetts who died in 1831. Paddock fought the British at
    New York, Trenton and Princeton, Haake said. The Daughters of the
    American Revolution have placed a memorial plaque on his grave marker.

    Paddock's daughter Jane married Gershom Flagg (1792-1857), a War of
    1812 veteran, Haake said.

    "In 1816, he started his journey west - by foot and flatboat - to
    reach St. Louis in November 1817," Haake said. "Gershom later became
    justice of the peace and postmaster of Paddock's Grove, which was
    the name of the area at the time."

    The history rolls on. Gershom's son Willard Cutting Flagg (1829-1878)
    was one of the early forces behind the creation of the University
    of Illinois. He served as the school's farm superintendent and was
    on the board of trustees from 1867 until his death. He also was a
    state senator from 1869 to 1873. Flagg House, a dormitory on the
    Urbana-Champaign campus, is named in his honor.

    Willard's son Norman Gershom Flagg (1867-1948) attended Washington
    University, where he became lifelong friends with William Greenleaf
    Eliot Jr., grandson of the school's co-founder. The letters between
    the two are preserved in Washington University's archives.

    Norman Flagg had a long career in politics. He served as a state
    representative from 1909 to 1927, and then as a state senator until
    1939.

    But alongside all of this history of service and sacrifice rests the
    unassuming stone of Alfred F. Kempton (1903-93). His stone simply
    bears the inscription: "And the skies are not cloudy all day."

    ALLEN

    An amusement park, an interstate highway and a strip mall have carved
    away at the little town of Allenton, which has been absorbed by Eureka,
    and some fear the small cemetery there will become the final whittle.

    "The town of Allenton needs to be written about before it is gone
    forever," said Wallace Wallach, who has researched some of the graves
    in the cemetery.

    The most intriguing stone is that of Daniel N. Keeler, a veteran of
    the Civil War. The gravestone notes, with fierce pride, on what side
    Keeler served:

    "Died For the Union" and "Maimed in the service of his country" are
    engraved into the stone, which has remained remarkably white since
    being placed when Keeler died in 1874 at the age of 34.

    Keeler served as a private in Company C, 8th Regiment of the Missouri
    Volunteers and was wounded at Fort Donelson. He was discharged at
    Jefferson Barracks. The old Grand Army of the Republic Lodge (a
    fraternal order popular around the turn of the century) in Wildwood
    was named after Keeler.

    Underscoring Missouri's divided loyalties between the Union and
    the Confederacy, one row away from Keeler's grave is the stone for
    Chas. B. Broadwater, who served with Company A of the 2nd Arkansas
    Infantry.

    URMENIA LODGE

    Right in the middle of West County suburbia, near Olive and Woods
    Mill roads in Chesterfield, sits a small cemetery in a grove of old
    oak trees. Most of the graves are from burials in the late 1800s.

    "It was for folks who farmed around here when there was nothing out
    this far west," said Wesley Stemme, 76, who has retired from farming
    but still lives nearby. He added that some of the farmers belonged
    to a fraternal organization called the Armenian Lodge.

    "But there were all kinds of different people buried there because
    it wasn't affiliated with any church," Stemme said. "And I think it
    also served as a potter's field of sorts for burying some people who
    had no one."
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