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To care for the dead, and beautify and adorn their silent
habitations, is a solemn duty incumbent upon the living, and a
beautiful, well-kept burying-ground is a sure index of the finer
feelings of the people to whom it belongs. Abraham said: " Give me
possession of a burying-place with you, that I may bury my dead out
of sight," and since that day all nations and peoples have paid more
or less respect to their dead, according to their stage of
civilization.
The early records of the county show that Bartholomew Wood, among
other donations to the town of Hopkinsville, made one of a certain
lot of land for a cemetery. This is in the southwest part of the
city, adjoining the grounds of the High School building, and is
known as the Old Baptist Cemetery. Here, where the grass, weeds and
briers grow rank with the vapors of decaying mortality, sleep many
of the early pioneers of Hopkinsville and Christian County, some of
them without so much as a rude bowlder to mark the spot where they
lie. Upon the stones, now crumbling into dust like the bones which
rest beneath them, appear many names once well known in the town.
There is the name almost obliterated by moss growing over it of
Benjamin Eggleston, who died in 1819; Francis M. Dallam, who died in
1823; William Nichol in 1829; Benjamin York in 1825; John Gibson,
born in 1777 and died in 1844; Mrs. Ann E. Wood in 1838; James H.
McLaughlan, the first regular Circuit Clerk, died in 1 823; Peyton
Short in 1825; Edward Slaughter in 1839; Dr. Moses Steele in 1817;
Mrs. Susanna Steele, born December 25, 1740, and died in 1820; Mrs.
Mary Bell in 1818; Benjamin W. Patton in 1825; John Long in 1816;
Samuel A. Miller in 1823, and many others who passed away half a
century ago. Some of the old family servants sleep there too, side
by side with their masters, and " six feet of earth make them all of
one size."
As the city increased in population and necessity demanded an
ex-tension of its limits, the old burying-ground was deemed too near
for convenience, and, besides, too small for the growing community.
So, about 1836-37, a new cemetery was laid out north of the city,
just across the river, typical, perhaps, of that river we must all
sooner or later cross to reach our home in the skies. It is a
beautiful cemetery, artistically laid out with walks and drives, and
well shaded with trees, and ornamented with shrubbery and flowers.
Neat white slabs, handsome tombs and towering monuments show the
affection of surviving friends for their loved and lost ones. The
first person buried there was Mrs. Phaup, in 1837; a large stone
slab stands at the head of her graver which is to the left of the
entrance to the " old part " of the grounds. Probably nearly three
thousand persons have been buried there since then. Strolling
through the numerous walks, one may notice the graves of many noted
people once eminent in the history of Hopkinsville: Fidelio Sharp
and Rufus Lansden, two prominent lawyers; Judge A. D. Rodgers;
Reuben Rowland, long Cashier of the old Bank of Kentucky; John
Bryant, Zachariah Glass, Thomas P. Clark, John Phaup, Isaac Landes,
Gen. Daniel Hayes, Archibald Gant, John Buckner, James Moore, Judges
Benjamin Shackelford and Rezin Davidge, Dr. Felix G. Montgomery,
Abram Stites, for more than a quarter of a century County Clerk;
Maj. John P. Campbell, for many years President of the Bank of
Kentucky, and Gen. James S. Jackson, of whom it was written a few
years ago: " Here sleeps, after a tempestuous life, the intrepid and
fearless Gen. James S. Jackson, member of the Legislature and
Congressman, whose dauntless spirit, which laughed at danger, even
to rashness, took its flight on the bloody field of Perryville. Like
Harry Percy, this Hotspur of the Union army waved his sword in the
face of death as gayly as though a desperate battle were a dress
parade, and the war bugles were sounding the strains of a
ball-room." Many others might be named whose finger-marks are still
to be seen on every hand.
Within the last few years a large addition has been laid out to this
" silent city of the dead," and highly improved, rendering it
sufficiently large to last for many years, without again extending
its limits. The Hopkinsville Republican of November 10, 1881, said:
" A number of handsome monuments of marble and granite, some of them
quite costly and elaborate, have been erected, both in the old
quarter and in the recent large addition so handsomely laid off by
Mr. Grove, of Louisville. Roses of the finest varieties bloom
luxuriantly all through the seasons, and purple-fringed wild flowers
blend their solemn beauty with the hectic flush and autumnal gold of
the sumac and maples. Vigorous growths of white pines, dark firs and
funereal cypress afford a snug shelter for the numerous thrushes,
mocking-birds and red-birds which delight to build their nests in
the thickly matted boughs, and pour forth their early morning notes,
wrapped in their own little dreams of joy, and unconscious of the
aching hearts and human sorrow whose pale emblems glimmer around
them."
During the late war Mr. Louis Elb, aided by the generosity of Mr.
Wolf, of Louisville, once a merchant of this place, bought a lot for
the Jews where the dead have since been buried. It is in the rear of
the Sharp homestead, in the cedar grove near the Nashville road, and
some years since was inclosed by order of the City Council. It is a
very hand-some little burying-ground.
The colored people also have a cemetery. This is situated just
beyond the fair grounds, and is known as Union Benevolent Cemetery.
It contains a number of handsome stones and slabs, and is kept in
good order and taste
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