Monday, September 17, 2012

Hillsboro Pioneer Cemetery...Rich in History


                The oldest pioneer cemetery in Washington County, outside of Portland, OR is Hillsboro Pioneer Cemetery, was established during the homestead period, in 1860. Here lies many of the most notable political figures that helped establish the town of Hillsboro, including the first mayor of Hillsboro, several successive mayors, supreme court justices and state legislators.
                What is most striking is the many plots dedicated to families, something you don’t often find in modern day gravesites. Cement strips that hold several headstones. Back in the 1800’s through the early 1900’s, families tended to stay together, through necessity over anything else, and therefore were buried together. You just don’t see that these days, as families split apart through divorce and/or geography. Walking through this cemetery, children who died at 9, 10, 11 years of age in the late 1800’s are buried next to their parents and grandparents who died much later.


                The Tongue family…..the family gravestone is a tall spear of marble that towers over the rest. During a lightning storm, the top was broken off, and was later mortared back on.
                There were several headstones with the freemason insignia. Flat, unknown grave markers, weathered stones where you can barely make out the names carved into them.
                One particular headstone of note must have have any decedents who care enough for its upkeep because the neighboring tree has uprooted it.




One of the pictures we took was of this gravestone of Demarcus C. Williams, who died in 1962 at the tender age of eleven. On a whim, I Googled this and found that someone else took a photo of the same headstone and put it on a website named billiongraves.com. It is here where I discovered that the Pioneer Cemetery is actually two separate cemeteries stuck together. The other one is called Independent Order of Odd Fellows cemetery, and each and every one of the graves is documented and on the website. Turns out that the IOOF and the Masonic Lodge collaborated to create the cemetery in 1960. Indeed, the freemason emblem can be found on many of the headstones here.
Rich in history, this pioneer cemetery holds the remains of civil war veterans (from both sides) as well as veterans for every subsequent war. Next week we will visit the pioneer cemetery in Portland, which holds the remains of the city’s founder, Bill Overton.