| Mountain
Home Cemetery
One
of Kalamazoo's oldest and most impressive cemeteries is Mountain
Home Cemetery, located on the north side of West Main Street just
west of Douglas Avenue. The trustees of Mountain Home Cemetery,
including Isaac Moffat, Luther H. Trask, Nathaniel A. Balch,
Epaphroditus Ransom, etc., were incorporated into an official entity
in 1849. The grounds for the cemetery were purchased from Clark and
Gilbert in 1850. The
original parcel was 17 acres, roughly square, with two additions in
subsequent years that brought the property to 28 acres in
size. A small Jewish
cemetery adjoins Mountain Home's southwest corner. The land was surveyed, and the purchasers chose lots for
their personal use before putting the rest up for sale to the
general public for the fee of twenty dollars.
 |
|
Mountain Home Cemetery, Kalamazoo,
1883-1895. View of the family plot for G. T.
Clark. Negative was purchased from the estate of
Wallace S. White. |
|
Source: Kalamazoo Public Library
Photograph P-614 |
Many
of Kalamazoo's most prominent citizens bought lots in the new
cemetery. The list of lots sold by 1878 shows many familiar names,
including U. S. Senator Charles Stuart, Paulus
denBleyker, Ira &
Charles Burdick, Stephen S. Cobb, Governor Epaphroditus
Ransom,
Henry and William Upjohn, and Frederick Bush.
It is thought that the first person buried at Mountain
Home was Mr. Nichols West, who died in 1849.
Other well known Kalamazooans who are buried there include Charles
B. Hays, Caroline
Bartlett Crane, Edwin and
Cynthia Van Deusen, John
Fetzer, Albert
M. Todd, and the Gilmore family.
 |
|
Receiving vault. Photographed by Alex
Forist, 2005. |
In
1878 a handsome Gothic style receiving vault was constructed where
the bodies of persons who owned a lot in the cemetery could be kept until their
burial, which was sometimes delayed by weather.
Another architecturally interesting building, the
Romanesque-style sexton's lodge, was built in 1892. During the first half of the twentieth century, the sextons
of Mountain Home did double duty running a floral shop and several
greenhouses in addition to the cemetery itself.
The sexton's house served as a florist's shop into the 1950s.
The last greenhouse was taken down in 1960 to make room for an
expansion of the cemetery.
An
important turning point in the history of Mountain Home came in
1940. After being
privately owned for 90 years, the board of trustees of the cemetery
decided to deed both Mountain Home Cemetery and the Mountain Home
Greenhouses, along with cash and other considerations, to the
city of Kalamazoo. In
the years following, the city government has been responsible for
the grounds of the cemetery and for providing perpetual care to the
gravesites.
 |
|
Mountain Home Cemetery, looking
northeast. Photographed by Alex Forist, 2005. |
In
addition to countless funerals, Mountain Home Cemetery has seen its
share of other events, like the Memorial Day observance that was
front-page news in the Gazette in 1891.
It has also survived the 1980
tornado that tore through Kalamazoo, causing significant
damage to trees and headstones in the cemetery.
However, a stroll through Mountain Home is usually a quiet
and peaceful affair that showcases the final resting places of many
of Kalamazoo's most well-known and influential citizens.
|
For further information, we suggest
these sources:
|
| H 720.9774 H498 |
Henehan, Brendan. Walking
Through Time: A Pictorial Guide to Historic Kalamazoo. Kalamazoo
Historical Commission, 1981, page 95 (about the sexton's
lodge). |
| H 977.417 H67u |
History of Kalamazoo
County, Michigan...., originally published in 1880 by
Everts & Abbott, reprinted in 1976 by Unigraphic, pages
213, 215, 250 and 251. |
| |
History Room Subject File: Cemeteries |
| |
Kalamazoo
County Deed, Liber P, page 87.
|
| H
977.418 K14, vols. 1-3 |
Mountain Home Cemetery burial
records, lot maps and lot owners, typescript, 1953. |
| H
720.9774 H838 |
"Mountain
Home Cemetery Receiving Vault," Kalamazoo Lost and
Found, page 164. |
| |
"Tributes
to the dead: the heroes of the war honored by the
populace," Kalamazoo Gazette, 31 May 1891, page 1,
column 1. |
| |
"West Main loses
landmark: greenhouse on the hill bows to expansion," Kalamazoo
Gazette, 13 April 1960, in Historic Sites scrapbook
#9, page 24. |
Written by Alex Forist, Kalamazoo Public Library staff,
July 2005. Last updated 7 June 2006.
return to All About Kalamazoo
menu
|