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Woodland Cemetery

Woodland Cemetery

Serving families since 1845

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History

Photo and History courtesy of Catherine Wilson from the Greene County Historical Society

Woodland Cemetery is a rural, park-like cemetery, which style was made popular by Mount Auburn Cem in Cambridge MA, dated 1831.  First president of WCA was Elias F. Drake, banker, newspaper publisher, and politician.  Cemetery board meetings went on for 2 years before directors were chosen!  Howard Daniels, a Cincinnati landscape gardener, architect, and draftsman, was hired by the board sometime between Dec 1847 and Feb 1848.  The earliest extant plan of the cemetery is from an 1852 map of Xenia, which can be seen at the Greene County Room, Xenia library.  A noteworthy feature is that there are no single-family mausoleums on the site despite Woodland being the resting place of several locally prominent families.  The cemetery contains 60 acres.

          Many family and rural cemeteries were moved to Woodland, as well as the German Reformed cemetery which was on Church St, the Methodist on Third St, and the Associate at Market and West (later the site of McKinley Elementary and now Xenia Towers).  The Associate Reformed or Gowdy cemetery is still located on East Third, but has not been active since the 1850s.

Timeline

1845, 25 Feb:  Woodland Cemetery Association chartered by Ohio General Assembly

1847, 15 Apr:  WCA board of directors selected

1847, Nov:  19 acre site purchased

1847, Dec:  Bylaws and rules for interments and visitors released

1847, 7 Dec:  First burial, Mary Ann Hollingshead, died of consumption at age 22

1848, Feb:  Purchase of less than 1 acre

1848, Apr:  Second burial, Margaret Parthena Brown, age 3

* Between 1852-1874, road patterns changed

1857:  Cost of burial lot $20 (now $7620)

1876:  Cost of burial lot $30 (now $9030)

1877:  19 more acres purchased for $3000; cost of burial lot $40

1892:  Perpetual care instituted

1900:  Old courthouse columns moved to entrance, cost $205 (current cost $26,100 using

            relative wage of unskilled workers); galvanized zinc balls (made by CC Henrie of Xenia) were

            on top of columns at one time

1901:  Telephone line installed in cemetery superintendent’s office; cement walk from gate to

            grounds and water hydrants installed

1912:  ornamental iron gate at entrance planned, with possible arch connecting columns (didn’t

            happen)

1913:  Memorial chapel & receiving vault built, section M; built by Jas. H. Loyd of Xenia with

            $12,998 contract, plus $5175.50 in extras (Geo. Dodds & Sons furnished marble & built vault

            for $2600, other expenses of furnishings, paying architect &c).  Plans & specifications drawn

            up by Wm. Kauffman of Pittsburgh PA (nephew of Miss Roberts).  Art glass subscribed by Thos.

            Taggart; first donor Miss Diana Roberts ($1000) with other money raised ($10,915) and

            Woodland Cem Assn had $2000 saved up.  145 individuals, firms, families, and lodges

            subscribed to the chapel fund as well.

1914:  Lewis Post GAR monument erected

1915:  proposal that 3 Civil War cannons be acquired for cemetery (didn’t happen)

1918, Mar:  Reported 8242 burials to date

1936:  Chapel razed

1937:  Caretaker’s house built, using stones from chapel; 8 rooms, 1½ stories.  Schenck & Williams

            of Dayton, architects; McCurran Bros of Xenia, contractors. Structure stands just south of

            former residence, which was razed to build this one; bronze plaques with names of chapel

            donors were placed in new house, several of whom are buried here. Stone speakers’ rostrum

            erected on “slight rise” at chapel site (still there 1947)

1938:  Entrance beautification, under supervision of C.E. Kern of Kern Nurseries, Wyoming OH; work

            done by Jeffryes & Son, Xenia; financed by Chandler trust fund (Virgil & George, former

            Xenia merchants whose sister Anna is buried here).  Entrance widened, sharp incline

            reduced, driveway widened, concrete curb & gutters, new foundation for columns,

            evergreen hedge added both sides, about 25 trees planted, bronze letters on 2 of 4 columns

1947, Jun:  Reported 12,963 burials to date

1953:  Reported 13,917 burials to date; additional property acquired

1962:  Helen Hooven Santmyer’s book Ohio Town contains a descriptive chapter about this

            cemetery

1963:  Companion garden, section 1B

1974, 3 Apr:  Severe tornado damage to trees and gravestones

1999, May:  Mausoleum built; 192 crypts, 460 urn niches

2015:  Interior of caretaker’s house remodeled into office & board room setup; hasn’t been

            residence since 2010 or so

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