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Display of historic articles, photos and items at the Madison Historical Society's "Summer Exhibition 2013 and 2014
The Business of Leisure: Madison Welcomes its Summer Colony." See www.madisoncthistorical.org for more on this organization. See additional exhibits at flic.kr/s/aHskcW91YE. (Photo Credit - Bob Gundersen www.flickr.com/photos/bobphoto51/albums)
Display at Shirley Library by the NZ Association of Women in Aviation.
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Photo by Valerie Livingstone.
As I was driving to my planned cemetery visit, I passed this little cemetery. I came back and didn't even see a sign naming it. It had such fabulous stones. Still, no name. I came home and did some research. Here are two articles I found on this little cemetery located in Palmyra, Pennsylvania:
The cemetery that no one wants.
April 10, 2008
BY MONICA VON DOBENECKÂ
No one wants the Cherry Street cemetery in Palmyra, where about 1,000 people are buried, including veterans of the War of 1812, the Spanish-American War and the Civil War.
The cemetery is supposedly owned by a private corporation started in 1867 and run by a board of trustees elected by lot owners. But the trustees are long gone and nobody can find lot owners. A bank account has $30,000 for maintenance, but no one is authorized to write checks. Volunteers have been mowing the grass, but they're tired of the work.
At a news conference today, representatives of two churches that have taken care of the cemetery for the past 140 years said will do so no longer and are turning their records over to the Borough of Palmyra.
Borough manager Sherry Capello said she has no intention of accepting them. "For 140 years, the churches accepted care of the cemetery," she said. "We feel they have the responsibility."
The cemetery began in 1867, when six people who were members of the predecessors to Palm Lutheran Church and Trinity United Church of Christ formed the Palmyra Cemetery Association. Trustees were elected by lot owners, but at some point the annual elections stopped. Church members continued to manage the cemetery.
According to Palm Lutheran church member Harry Fox, the churches got a letter from the borough in 2003 saying the sidewalk next to the cemetery needed repairs. The churches hired attorney John Feather to check into their legal authority and their obligation to care for the cemetery. Feather concluded they had neither.
Capello said the borough contacted the churches when neighbors started complaining that grass and weeds were getting high.
For a while, volunteers from the Brethren in Christ church agreed to take care of it because their church was across the street. But the dozen or so volunteers decided at the end of last year they wouldn't do it any longer.
In the meantime, Feather tried to find people who would act as temporary trustees to get the cemetery association going. He was unsuccessful. He also couldn't find lot owners, although a woman was buried there as recently as a year ago.
Fox said in a written statement Thursday, "The churches have concluded that their mission and ministry is not to operate and maintain a cemetery."
Feather said he would leave the cemetery records with the library or the historical society if the borough does not accept them. He said the Pennsylvania Borough Code and the Pennsylvania Burial Grounds Law give the courts the right to direct the borough to take over neglected cemeteries.
According to Capello, that can happen if a majority of a borough's property owners agree. The code limits the amount a borough can pay for cemetery maintenance yearly to $3,000, she said.
Bob Stewart, director of the Pennsylvania Cemetery Funeral and Cremation Association, said there are hundreds of abandoned cemeteries in the state, many of them started in the 1800's. "The state doesn't have anything for abandoned cemeteries," he said. "I don't know what you do in that situation."
Capello said the situation is sad. "You can't just walk away because you don't want to do it any more and throw it at the borough," she said. "What's really sad is that it is a cemetery, and it's like disrespecting the dead."
and an update from May 2009:
Borough to mow cemetery for now
Friday, May 01, 2009
BY BARBARA MILLER arbmiller@patriot-news.com
PALMYRA - Palmyra Borough Council will mow the "orphan" cemetery on West Cherry Street this summer, while the borough and two churches say they are hoping for resolution of the dispute over care of the site.
Council agreed April 27 to mow the cemetery through Oct. 1 and bill the cemetery's trust fund for the cost, which is estimated at $1,000 per mowing.
"Council concluded it's the right thing to do for the appearance of the community in general," said Keith Costello, council president. "And it doesn't put us in a bad position if we need to proceed with litigation."
Care of the cemetery is in dispute, because its board of trustees no longer exists. While members of two churches that once had representation on the trustees cared for the cemetery for 140 years, last year they said they will no longer do so.
After the borough tried to get the churches to repair sidewalk along the cemetery in 2003, the churches researched ownership and concluded this was not their responsibility.
The borough last year filed a petition in Lebanon County court asking the churches to be held responsible for care of the cemetery.
Josele Cleary, borough solicitor, said borough officials met recently with representatives of the churches. No agreement was reached, but they will continue meeting, she said.
Representatives of Palm Lutheran and Trinity United Church of Christ met Monday and agreed on a proposal to work with the borough on this issue, said the Rev. Mike Beynon of Trinity.
"I'm glad the cemetery is going to be maintained, and I'm glad for the increasing amount of camaraderie working with the new officials in the borough," Beynon said.
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The Wistarion, p. 36, 1947, Archives & Special Collections, Hunter College Libraries, Hunter College of the City University of New York, New York City.
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The Wistarion, Pg. 79, 1940, Archives & Special Collections, Hunter College Libraries, Hunter College of the City University of New York, New York City.
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Chair of PNCA's new MFA in Print Media, Matthew Letzelter, students and faculty use the new Watershed Grey ink by Gamblin in the Gordon Gilkey Print Center at PNCA. The limited edition, recycled Watershed Grey relief ink is a collaboration between the PNCA's MFA in Print Media and Gamblin, named after Watershed, the programs new fine arts print publisher. Photos by Sarah Meadows, '08.
Jade gallery, Henan Provincial Museum, Zhengzhou. Complete indexed photo collection at WorldHistoryPics.com.
Three pamphlets, "Writing Arabic" "Bench/Stern" & "No Grand Coulee", with stapled binding issued in a slipcase.
Balsmeyer, Jeff. Writing Arabic: Bench/stern & No Grand Coulee, Four Articles. San Francisco: San Francisco Art Institute, 1977.
See MCAD Library's catalog record for this book.
Interview with director Stephan Elliott promoting his film The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, starring Terence Stamp, Hugo Weaving and Guy Pearce, Cinema Papers October 1994
Look at the name of a riot and the mind craves details: Why? How many? For how long? Sometimes it’s just the name of a place: Kent State, Watts, Crown Heights. Or a year: 1968. When people run mad through the streets, we’re reminded that civilization is little more than a collective leap of faith.
Here are some notes to start a conversation about riots in America.
Promotional blurb for The Matrix Reloaded in Empire, April 2003's "50 Reasons Movies Kick Ass Right Now" feature. Image features Keanu Reeves and Hugo Weaving in the "Burly Brawl" sequence.
TV Week interview (21 July 1984) with Hugo Weaving promoting the miniseries Bodyline, in which Weabing played English cricket captain Douglas Jardine.
Please Credit: Lambda Archives of San Diego
Description: LASD City Hall Exhibit 2010: A display of shirts, news articles, and various ephemera from events including the "No on 6" campaign
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Local Call number: P119.056m.r.t
Women Take Back The Night March poster and San Diego Women's Music Festival poster created by Connie Jeung-Mills.
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Top Articles from The Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology - wileyasia.wordpress.com/2012/11/07/top-articles-from-the-...
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Hugo Weaving and Philip Seymour Hoffman take a break from rehearsals for STC's production of Riflemind; from the Sun Herald 16 September 2007
articles archives folder collection celebrities famous robert bust richard actors album photo rob cover drug south market 2012 yeatts conference madison radford seven jr shields alan murphy jackson allen 012
Coverage of MTC's God of Carnage cast party in The Sunday Age, 6 September 2009. Hugo Weaving, Natasha Herbert are briefly quoted.
Movie 97 (June) True Love and Chaos preview; film starred Hugo Weaving, Mirando Otto, Noah Taylor and Naveen Andrews.