
Sappington Cemetery - Arrow Rock, Missouri
Posted by:
BruceS
N 39° 01.966 W 093° 00.437
15S E 499369 N 4320412
Quick Description: Historic cemetery near Arrow Rock, Missouri, the Sappington Cemetery houses the graves of prominent pioneer physician Dr. John Sappington and two former Missouri governors, Meredith Miles Marmaduke, and Claiborne Fox Jackson.
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 4/22/2007 4:01:52 PM
Waymark Code: WM1ERX
Views: 28
Long Description:
Dr. John Sappington (1776-1856), a prominent pioneer
physician of Saline County, established this family cemetery in
1831. The two-acre cemetery contains 111 headstones and markers and
is enclosed by a limestone wall and wrought iron fence.
Dr. Sappington studied medicine in Kentucky and in 1804
married Jane Breathitt, the sister of Kentucky Gov. John Breathitt.
In 1817, they came to central Missouri's "Boone's Lick Country" and
by 1819 settled just west of Arrow Rock.
A nonconformist, Dr. Sappington attacked the common medical
practice of bloodletting to treat patients. In the 1830s, he
perfected and mass marketed quinine in pill form to treat malarial
fever, a major disease in the Missouri River valley. The St. Louis
Medical Society denounced him as a quack, but his "anti-fever
pills" quickly became the frontier's most famous prescription. In
1844, he wrote "The Theory and Treatment of Fevers," the first
medical treatise published west of the Mississippi River.
Dr. Sappington was also a business entrepreneur,
agriculturist, land speculator and political confidant. He
established an economic and political dynasty that included three
Missouri governors. An inscription over his grave reads: "A truly
honest man is the noblest work of God. He lay like a warrior taking
his rest."
Along with the Sappington family, two of Missouri's
governors are buried in the cemetery. Both had married daughters of
Dr. Sappington.
Meredith Miles Marmaduke (1791-1864) was elected Lt. Governor
in 1840. A Benton Democrat and strong Unionist, he became
Missouri's eighth governor for nine months in 1844 after Gov.
Reynolds died. Marmaduke married Dr. Sappington's daughter Lavinia
in 1826 and became a partner in his father-in-law's enterprises.
Active in the Santa Fe trade, Marmaduke also served as Saline
County judge and surveyor. His son, John Sappington Marmaduke, was
Missouri's 25th governor (1885-1887).
Claiborne Fox Jackson (1806-1862) was beginning his term as
Missouri's 15th governor when the Civil War began. Jackson
supported slavery and advocated the secession of Missouri. In June
of 1861, federal troops occupied the capital of Jefferson City,
forcing Jackson and pro-secession officials to flee and join
Confederate forces. He died in Little Rock, Ark. in 1862 and was
reinterred in Sappington Cemetery after the war.
Prior to entering politics, Jackson was Arrow Rock's first
postmaster and engaged in retail trade and banking. He was elected
to the House of Representatives from Howard County in 1842, and
became a leader in the "Central Clique," the machine that dominated
Missouri's Democratic Party politics during the mid-19th century.
Jackson married three of Dr. Sappington's daughters: Jane in 1831,
Louisa in 1833 and Eliza in 1838. All three women are buried in the
cemetery.
Symbolism in Sappington Cemetery reflects some period beliefs.
Cedar and Austrian pine trees represent eternal life because they
are evergreen. Gov. Marmaduke's arched monument suggests victory
over death. The clasped hands symbolize a farewell and hope of
meeting in eternity. The Masonic compass shows he was a member of
that organization. Twin columns over Gov. Jackson's grave denote
"noble lives" of he and his wife.
The Sappingtons and their extended families owned large
numbers of African-American slaves whose labor and skills
contributed directly to their success and prosperity. Dr.
Sappington gave them a tract of ground as a burial place. Known as
the "Sappington Negro Cemetery," it is located on Route AA
one-quarter mile south of the Sappington Cemetery. It is privately
owned, but open to the public. ~
Sappington
Cemetery State Historic Site website