Indian Pioneer Papers - Index
Indian Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma
Date: September 21, 1937
Field Worker: Elizabeth Ross
#7601
FORGOTTEN GRAVEYARD
One of the oldest burying
grounds in Cherokee County, now altogether obliterated, once lay near the
north bank of the Park Hill branch, several hundred yards northeast of the
Campbell Springs. No one knows when the first interment was made, but in years
long past there were several of the older residents of the Park Hill locality
who asserted that quite a number of burials had been made during decades of
the past. Included in the number were whites, Indians, and negroes. The latter
eventually used the ground exclusively, and several of the old time colored
people, once slaves of residents of the section, were buried in what is now
the forgotten graveyard.
During the Civil War period a
number of men belonging to the band of which William C. Quantrill was the
leader, suddenly arrived in the Park Hill locality coming from the hills in
the south. Taken by surprise a group of men who were in the locality, were
attacked by the Quantrill men and several were killed. It is said to be quite
probably that the victims were buried in the old graveyard. And on another
occasion a band of armed men arrived and engaged in shooting such negro men as
were found and who sought safety in flight. Five or six of the colored men
were killed, according to those who recalled the circumstances and they, too,
were, no doubt, buried in the now obliterated burying ground.
Although for many years utilized from time
to time the old graveyard was never enclosed with a fence, nor was a tombstone
or monument ever erected. On the north side was a road which led through
a section of the locality and round about were forest trees. Superstitious
persons avoided passing the burying ground after nightfall, if possible, for
there were some who asserted they had seen weird and strange
"things" in the vicinity of the spot.
After the passage of many years the land
upon which the old graveyard was situated passed into possession of a new
owner, who soon cleared away the trees which stood in and about the burying
ground and with plows soon obliterated all traces of the graves. Since then
the spot has been cultivated and corn and oats have grown where an unknown
number of persons of various ages were buried in years of the past.
As there were settlers in the locality a
number of years before the name Park Hill was used, it is possible that first
interments were made more than a century ago, perhaps during the decade of the
twenties of the nineteenth century.
Near the vicinity of the old graveyard
there stood for many years a clump of Chickasaw plum trees, so the trees were
designated by some of the old-time residents. No one knew when the original
trees were planted, but it is possible that they once stood near the premises
of some early and now unknown settler.
Authorities: R. R. Meigs, Park Hill,
Oklahoma Wiley Britten, writer of Civil War events Personal recollections of
the old graveyard and a negro burial.
Submitted to OKGenWeb by Sandi Carter
<SandKatC@aol.com> August 2000.