Eloise Cemetery
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Jagman714
N 42° 16.967 W 083° 20.367
17T E 307107 N 4683824
Eloise Cemetery is located in Westland, MI. off of Henry Ruff and Michigan Ave.
Waymark Code: WM25C4
Location: Michigan, United States
Date Posted: 09/07/2007
Published By:Groundspeak Charter Member Max Cacher
Views: 78

At Henry Ruff near Michigan Avenue in Westland lies a pine-bordered cemetery, last resting place of more than 7,000 former residents of the Eloise Hospital and Infirmary.

Unattended for 50 years, the cemetery is undergoing dramatic changes. Presently, Wayne County, along with the City of Westland and Ford Motor Co.'s Land Management Division, is taking steps to upgrade the cemetery. Last year, the landscaping unit of Ford's division cut trees and removed overgrowth.

Eloise, as the 902-acre complex was known, no longer exists, but from 1839 until 1981, the facility served as the last home to thousands of Wayne County's mentally disadvantaged and indigent residents. The residents at Eloise, named after the daughter of Detroit's postmaster in the 1890s, grew their own food, dried tobacco for cigarettes, raised pigs and cattle, even ran their own theater. Through the years, three cemeteries were created on the grounds with the eventual consolidation of all the remains at Henry Ruff Cemetery in the early part of this century.

The current cemetery was in use 38 years, from 1910 to 1948. Plots were marked with a number. The numbers matched up with a death register. The old registers provide just the barest of details about Eloise's patients: name, age (often just guessed at), city the patient came from, occupation and cause of death.

The 1910 register book, its cover worn with age, shows the dead were mostly common working people: butcher, laborer, domestic baker, teamster, painter. Many were foreign born. Stripped of any modern medical jargon, the causes of death seem harsh: exhaustion from paralysis, senility, cancer of the face, strangulation from hanging.

Some residents were at Eloise only a brief period of time before their deaths. The register lists one 34-year-old tinsmith suffering from tuberculosis - admitted on October 8th, 1915, dead a scant two days later.

Burial options included having the family claim the body or having the unclaimed body donated to Detroit College of Medicine to be used for medical research. After 1948, all unclaimed bodies were sent to the college. Says Sirotti of the cemetery restoration work: "We envision this effort will emphasize how the Eloise complex affected the history of Wayne County."

The Michigan marker is locted about a half mile northwest of the cemetery in front of the old Eloise Hospital, now called the Kay Beard building.

see Waymark#WM1W6Hand this Link for more information.

City, Town, or Parish / State / Country: Not listed

Approximate number of graves: Not listed

Cemetery Status: Not listed

Cemetery Website: Not listed

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DougPeterson visited Eloise Cemetery 04/05/2013 DougPeterson visited it