
Henry Cemetery - Reger, MO
Posted by:
YoSam.
N 40° 07.734 W 093° 11.995
15T E 482967 N 4442083
Named after O. M. Reger, 1881. Before that it was called Elmore.
Waymark Code: WM9G2V
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 08/16/2010
Views: 2
Name Of Cemetery: Henry Cemetery
Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005
Location of Cemetery: MO-Z, 1 mile S. of Reger
County of Cemetery: Sullivan County
Number of Graves: 200, pre-1955 with 450 total
I found two Reger tombstones:
First:
Orra M. Reger
Born Beb 3, 1864 - Died Apr 23, 1945
Cora A Reger
Born Dec 27, 1864 - Died Mar. 5, 1909
The Second:
Lewis Philip Reger
Died Jan 3, 1896
Aged 47 yrs 22 ds.
SUSAN W. REGER
Sep. 24, 1849 - April 11, 1915
Can find snippets on the town, but not much on the cemetery. It is well kept, gate closed, but not locked (this is Missouri), and straddles the ridge top of a small hill.
"The Henry Cemetery is a large, relatively flat, open space set in the rural farmland of Sullivan
County. The cemetery contains little vegetation, though it is surrounded on three sides by
mature trees. Yuccas, traditional plantings in many cemeteries, are planted on either side of
the stone entry posts.
"The entrance and four corners of the cemetery are marked by stone posts. The two entry posts
are by far the largest, measuring four-feet in height and roughly one foot square. At one time,
statues were cemented to the top of these posts, and a remnant of one of these statues
remains on the top of the southernmost post. The corner posts are shorter and narrower,
though all posts are braced with smooth cut stones laid at an angle. The posts were placed
sometime in the mid-to-late 1800s. There are several small stone quarries in the immediate
vicinity of the cemetery and it is likely that these posts and many of the earliest grave markers
are of locally quarried limestone.
"The cemetery contains approximately 200 historic (pre-1955) grave markers, though several
unmarked graves and recent burials with modern markers are scattered throughout the
cemetery. Graves are aligned in roughly straight rows running north and south, with graves
facing east. Extant markers date from as early as 1841, when the first burial occurred, to
today. Because of the wide span of burials, the cemetery contains a variety of grave markers
from simple limestone slabs with hand carved names to more elaborate Victorian-era stones
with carved funerary iconography and elaborate epitaphs. Carvings include clasped hands,
lambs, doves, and opened books (Bibles), all common features of late 19th and early 20th
Century gravestones." ~ NRHP Nomination Form