Lincoln Cemetery - Montgomery, AL
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member xptwo
N 32° 22.061 W 086° 15.930
16S E 569099 N 3581428
Lincoln Cemetery was opened in 1907 as the first commerical cemetery for African Americans in the city. The City of Montgomery is trying to establish who might own it.
Waymark Code: WMGWTV
Location: Alabama, United States
Date Posted: 04/17/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Raine
Views: 6

Recognized as essentially abandoned, the city created the Lincoln Cemetery Rehabilitation Authority. The tragedy is that no one knows who really owns the cemetery, and it has created all sorts of problems. Although the city is taking it over, it was trying to find who was the real owner of the property. I was not able to find information about the outcome of the court case relating to that search. This cemetery may not be technically abandoned now that it has been taken over, but it can serve as how tragic the abandonment of cemeteries can be.

According to the historical information, the first burial would have been in 1907. The latest, according to the news stories, may have been as recent as two or three years ago. The entrance is located on Lincoln Road near the intersection with Harrison Road.

At the entrance is a historical marker from 2001, with general information:

Lincoln Cemetery
1907

In 1907 the American Securities Company opened Lincoln Cemetery for African Americans and Greenwood Cemetery for whites, the first commercial cemeteries in the city. Landscape design indicates Olmstead influences with curving drives and two circular sections. Space allotted for 700 graves with first interment in 1908. Most graves are simple concrete slabs with evidences of African-American funerary art and late-Victorian motifs. Marble markers denote members of Mosaic Templars of America, black benevolent society, or graves of veterans. American Securities owned site until tax-exemption ended in 1957. Vandalism and neglect have seriously damaged graves and landscape.

Alabama Historical Association
2001

The following story from 2012 helps one understand the situation:

"At most cemeteries, hearing weed cutters and lawn mowers trimming grass around graves would seem normal enough. But at Lincoln Cemetery in Montgomery, Ala., these are the sounds of progress.

Lincoln Cemetery was established in 1907 for African-Americans. But with no one in charge of the cemetery or keeping up with burial records, abuse, vandalism and neglect became rampant and the cemetery is in disrepair. Grass and weeds grew three feet high. People picked apart old, crumbling graves and took bones of the deceased.

And no one is quite where people are actually buried.

"When somebody would be buried here, they were burying people on top of people. See these two markers? They laid them up on this grave. So we're not sure which one of these spaces that person is in," says Phyllis Armstrong, a volunteer helping to clean up Lincoln.

Lincoln was designed for 700 graves. So far, volunteers have recorded more than nine times that amount — a total of 6,700 graves, some of which are actually under nearby roads.

Phillip Taunton heads the local group overseeing the cleanup.

"It's immoral and it's unethical for anything like this to be taking place, especially here in the city of Montgomery," Taunton says.

City leaders agreed. Two years ago, officials created an authority to restore the cemetery. Now, volunteers like Armstrong come out almost every day to cut grass, rake leaves and pick up litter. But the problems underscore a darker part of Southern history. Lee Anne Wofford of the Alabama Historical Commission says Lincoln is a direct result of segregation.

"What people don't understand is that it also applied in death. Not just at bus stations or restaurants or bathrooms, but in death also. So, you have separate cemeteries for whites and blacks," Wofford says.

Wofford walks to the grave marker of a woman who was key in the civil rights movement. Aurelia Browder-Coleman was a friend of Rosa Parks and was lead plaintiff in a historic court case. Browder v. Gayle ended segregation of Montgomery city buses in 1956. But Browder-Coleman's major contribution to the civil rights movement didn't keep her from segregation in death. Her marker was found leaning against a tree in Lincoln, and Wofford says no one even knows where she's buried.

"So you have prominent people who are just forgotten, lost. Where are they? But they were so significant in what they did in overturning long-standing laws," Wofford says.

This fall, a judge in Montgomery is set to decide who owns Lincoln Cemetery. hundred years. Until then, volunteers like Phyllis Armstrong will continue to clean and document graves and try to uncover the secrets that have been kept hidden for more than a hundred years." source is NPR at (visit link)
Earliest Burial: 01/01/1909

Latest Burial: 01/15/2010

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