"Only by preserving history are
we fit to make it." Edward Ronsheim
The Madison County
Cemetery Commission welcomes you.
The purpose of the Madison County Cemetery Commission is to restore an
d
preserve the early cemeteries in our Indiana county. Formed in 1973, Madison
County's sesquicentennial, the MCCC was established by the Madison County
Board of Commissioners in response to public concern and the passing of
state laws protecting the cemeteries of pioneers and early settlers. As in the
past, today's Board of Commissioners--Paul Wilson, Pat Dillon, and John Richwine--continue to recognize the need to maintain and protect this
important part of our local Madison County heritage.
We invite you to browse through our pages--to take a walk,
as it were, through our pioneer cemeteries, tour our Hoosier past, and meet our early settlers who
did the hard work of making a community out of the wilderness.
We might suggest that you meet an unassuming
national hero
of the War of 1812, the veteran
who was killed with a tomahawk at the Strawtown Massacre,
the twelve Revolutionary War
soldiers buried in our county, the first white family--Moravian
missionaries, 1801-1806,--descendents of a Mayflower pilgrim, a sweetheart of Hoosier poet
James Whitcomb Riley, a friend of Daniel
Boone, the protector of famous
African-American Frederick Douglass, a
Hancock whose ancestors escaped from hostile tribes, a responsible
pioneer bartender, the
very first mid-wife in the county, the
rafts man who delivered the lumber for the first court
house in Indianapolis, a merchant who supplied pork to Cuba,
another who sold bear skins and beeswax, a
postmaster who carried the mail in
his hat, a strong man who could split 500 rails a day,
an
Anderson mayor who had a story about a raccoon, the
justice of the peace who wrote everything in
verse, the
farmer who walked his
hogs from Chesterfield to Cincinnati, the
settler with the earliest birth
date, 1748 (!), the wealthiest
businessman, the
family who were traveling to Illinois when an
ox died, or the son
that helped preserve the
area that is now Mounds State Park. Madison County has a lot of
history to learn from and be proud of including the only instance during the
19th century that a United
States court of law
held whites strictly accountable for killing innocent Native Americans.
The convicted were sentenced to be hanged, legally executed,
and Native American tribal leaders were allowed to witness the event.
See what a pioneer homestead looked like, or
learn how to use a turnip
as a lamp. Go to church in the 1840s,
read a mystery, or meet an internationally registered
tree which helped guide settlers along the Fort Wayne Trace. Find out what
Pendleton was like in 1830 or where
Bonge's is located along White River or what
Anderson has to do with the Lenni Lenape or
where Alexandria's ghost travels or why
Summitville is
associated with stale cheese. Look at some beautiful
Federal homes
built
by
our pioneers or at an original log cabin still being
used as a residence.
Tour our stone library of 19th century memorial styles,
or attend some of Madison County's rededication
ceremonies. Learn the restoration process used for the newly reclaimed Cottrell Cemetery and
earlier for the Weddington Cemetery.
(Clicking on any of the underlined words will take you
immediately to the page that has that particular story.)
Cemetery List:
This is where to start if you are hunting for a specific burial ground.
This section has an alphabetical list of all pioneer cemeteries in Madison County.
Each cemetery then has its own web page which contains the cemetery's
location, list of recorded burials,
pictures, history, bits of biographies, and highlighted
pre-Civil War veterans. If you only have an ancestor's name, begin
with our site's search link. If your ancestor was a pioneer or early
settler, do not forget to look on the township history pages where you might find
more biographical information.
History & 1876 Maps:
If you are researching the early history of Madison County or any of its
townships, start here. This section provides a look at pioneer life, the beginnings of Madison
County, and the 1876 map of the county. Each township
page then continues
with early Madison County history and includes for the individual township
the 1876 plat map, pictures, biographical sketches, a list of early
settlers, and a list of cemet
eries.
Maps to Cemeteries: If you
want to visit a cemetery, this section shows for each township the modern roads and locations of
the pioneer cemeteries.
Photo Galleries:
If you enjoy looking at pictures, go here. This section has multiple
galleries. Among them are "Pioneer Homes and Buildings," "Native
Americans," and "Revolutionary War Veterans," which compile
all the pictures used throughout the site on each respective topic.
If you have information, comments, or questions about our
cemeteries, please
contact any one of the members of the 2008 Madison County Cemetery Commission:
Ranny Simmons, chairperson --
Email
Russ Willis -- Email
Devon Dow --
Email
Melody Hull, secretary; web site author and manager --
Email
Questions concerning
family genealogy should be addressed to the Indiana Room
at the Anderson Public Library.
This site is a work in progress. If you would like
to contribute biographical information about a pioneer buried in Madison
County, ask for a reciprocal link to a family genealogy web site, or suggest
a pre-Civil War homestead, house, or building for a picture, contact
Melody.
SOURCES
**Unless otherwise
noted, the historical and
biographical information, drawings, and maps used on this web site have been
researched and taken from the following literary sources:
Atlas of
Cemeteries and Record of Deceased Veterans of Madison County, Indiana. Zook, Haroldyne, compl. n.p. 1988.
Baker, Ronald L.
From Needmore to Prosperity. Indiana University Press. Bloomington &
Indianapolis, 1995.
Bock, Gene. "Man About Town." Anderson Herald-Bulletin, Anderson,
Dec. 6, 1969-Sept. 7, 1970.
Davis, Raymond.
"Memorial to Patriots of the American Revolution Resting in Madison County."
Biographical History of Madison County, Indiana. Hawkins, H. H.,
editor. n.p. Anderson, 1978.
Dittlinger, Esther.
Anderson A Pictorial History. G. Bradley Publishing, Inc. St. Louis,
1990.
Forkner, John L. History of Madison County, Indiana, Vol. I & Vol. II. Lewis
Publishing Company. Chicago, 1914.
Harden, Samuel.
History of Madison County, Indiana. n.p. 1874.
Harden, Samuel.
The Pioneer. William Mitchell Printing Company. Greenfield, 1895.
History of Madison
County, Indiana. Helm, T. B., editor. Kingman Brothers. Chicago, 1880.
McPherson,
Alan. Indian Names in Indiana. The Blasted Works. Monticello, 1993.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The MCCC wishes to thank Beth Oljace
and Ranny Simmons for compiling and offering for use on this web site the
Anderson Public Library's Tombstone Records Database.
Unless otherwise noted, all the
photographs contained herein were taken by MCCC members.
The web site manager would like to
also thank Tom Hull for his help in taking pictures and setting up the
program and John P. Summers for his gift of the Madison County history
books.