St. Mary's County
St. Mary's County, established 1637, county seat Leonardtown.
News from the County:
An update to the book "Burials From Tombstones, Grave Markers, and
Church Registries of St. Mary's County, Maryland (1634-1994)" by Janet
Tice is now fore sale. Shelly Johnson completed a project to update the
major cemeteries in St. Mary's County for the period 1994 to July
2007. The book is available for purchase at Updated Index to St Mary's
County, MD Cemeteries 1994-July 2007 for $30.50.
St. Nicholas Cemetery, Naval Air Station, Patuxent River,
March 2005
* To date, 28 memorials have been
repaired and re-erected on the site.
* Phase III has been approved and allows for 20 more stones to be
recovered and re-erected
* Approximately 190 memorials remain to be discovered (that we know of.)
* An anonymous donor sent a check for $10,000 to perform a GPR survey
of the site. We hope to begin in April. This is going to be pretty
thrilling as it will tell us exactly where the stones are, where all
the burials are, and the location on the old buildings on the site.
This project is moving forward quickly. Sen. Roy Dyson has sponsored a
bond bill in the Maryland General Assembly to be read this Saturday
(March 19, 2005). If passed, this bill will allow for an $8000 grant
toward the project. Keeping our fingers crossed.
John Wesley Chapel and Graveyard
We invite you to visit the web site for the Property Owners of Wicomico
Shores Association, Inc. This civic association has
done extensive research about John Wesley
Chapel and Graveyard located within Wicomico Shores and
reported their findings on these pages. In addition to the
research on the history of the Methodist Chapel and Graveyard there are
extensive photographs detailing the abundant overgrowth and the general
air of abandonment of the site.
The POWSA is concerned that the site of the John Wesley Chapel
and Graveyard is adjacent to and possibly on land currently being
considered for development of homes and retirement
condominiums. Continue to watch this page for developments
of the preservation and protection of this historical site.
St. Nicholas Cemetery, Naval Air Station,
Patuxent River, 2003
On September 11, 2003, Scott Lawrence visited the Coalition’s website
and signed our guest book. His note indicated that he is
diligently working to restore the desecrated cemetery at St. Nicholas
Church, Patuxent River, Maryland. He provided links for two websites
and a link to an article that appeared in the Washington Post on August
3, 2003 entitled “Bringing a Cemetery Back to Life, Air Station Site
May Be Archaeological Dig” by Ernesto Londoño.
A couple of years ago Scott Lawrence, ago 40 of Great Mills learned
that his ancestors were buried in the cemetery at St. Nicholas, the
chapel at
Patuxent River Naval Air Station. Scott questioned the accuracy of the
information considering there was no cemetery there that he could see.
The Navy had built Patuxent River Naval Air Station in the early 40s.
Existing on the land was St. Nicholas Church and its cemetery.
The Navy decided to lay down all the tombstones in the cemetery and to
cover them with dirt [1943]. The decision was made because it was
believed that military personnel would be demoralized seeing the
cemetery upon entering the installation, considering the United States
was in the throes of World War II.
Lawrence contacted base officials and was provided a list of the 320
people interred at St. Nicholas along with a map of the burial ground.
Lawrence
researched the records of St. Michael’s parish and Holy Face parish,
also
in St. Mary’s County, and determined that 264 graves were not listed on
the
Navy’s map and list.
Scott Lawrence has received preliminary permission from the Navy to
“resurrect” the cemetery. Considering the land is on Federal
property there are a number of laws that will direct how the project
should proceed.
When Lawrence receives the final go ahead, “the first step will be to
map
out the site once more, this time with ground-penetrating radar, a
device
used by archaeologists to identify buried items. After that, the
archaeologist would dig up the markers, clean and catalogue them before
mounting them
again at individual gravesites.”
The biggest question facing the project is how many of the buried
tombstones will still have legible inscriptions?
[ed. Note. Jeff and I were involved in groups that unearthed several
stones that had been buried. We noticed that the inscriptions
that were buried were protected from the environment and more legible
than similar stones
that had continuously been exposed to the elements. The stones at
St.
Nicholas were buried before acid rain became a serious problem.
We
predict that Mr. Lawrence will be pleased with the legibility of the
writing
once the stones are exposed and cleaned. What are your
experiences?
Send us your thoughts on the subject or experiences in the field and we
will
print the responses in the next issue.]
Scott also provided a link to another article that appeared in Tester,
news and information for Naval Air Station Patuxent River personnel, on
April 10, 2003. To read the entire article go to
http://www.cdmilitary.com/navy/tester/8_14/features/22558-1.html.
For a listing of the burials your can visit
http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/md/stmary/cemeteries/stnicholas.txt
Anyone wishing to contact Scott Lawrence he can be reached at
killdozr@erols.com.
Helpful County Resources:
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Ellicott City, MD 21041
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