Changing times from days when Catholics, Protestants needed separate cemeteries
BRET HAYWORTH
5 hrs ago
ANTHON, Iowa | In the small town of Anthon, there are two cemeteries one mile apart -- Oak Hill Cemetery on the north edge of town and the Mount St. Joseph Cemetery on the south end. The latter is where people of the Catholic faith have been buried for generations.
Separate cemeteries for Catholics have been a tradition in many Iowa communities since the state was first settled more than 150 years ago, although with some differences. Twenty miles from Anthon, for example, the town of Danbury has a single cemetery, although with widely known sections for Catholics and non-Catholics.
"Well, you go to the Catholic side," was the phrase Ruth Groth, of Anthon, said she heard from her Catholic relatives from Danbury.
The separate Catholic cemeteries are something many Siouxlanders have known about, and they'll have a reminder this weekend when many decorate the graves of relatives and friends as part of the Memorial Day holiday.
http://siouxcityjournal.com/lifestyles/features/changing-times-from-days-when-catholics-protestants-needed-separate-cemeteries/article_fcac56e4-780d-5357-a46f-a5d84e0a8035.html
nycbos
(6,345 posts)👌
No Vested Interest
(5,196 posts)of spouses. Not good for those left behind.
Then there's the problem of non-practicing Catholics and former Catholics, who never really embraced another faith but can hardly be called "Catholic" at the time of death.
I personally believe charity should prevail and people should be buried where they and the family left behind wish and deem best for all concerned.
47of74
(18,470 posts)They allowed him to be buried in one of the local Catholic cemeteries back in 1980. I think if the church had insisted that he not be buried there he and Grandma would have bought their plots at the nearby non-sectarian cemetery.
47of74
(18,470 posts)They have one large cemetery that had three main sections - one for the members of St. Mary's Church (mainly Germans), the other for St. Martin's parishioners (mainly Irish), and the protestant section. Or maybe it was three separate cemeteries that grew into each other over time.
St. Mary's and St. Martin's were only a few blocks from each other. St. Mary's closed several years ago and is now an antiques shop.
No Vested Interest
(5,196 posts)I'm guessing there is a building on the property, preferably near the entrance, that is housing the antiques.
47of74
(18,470 posts)Not the cemetery. Sorry for any confusion
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(5,196 posts)Some become homes; others restaurants. So why not an antique store?
47of74
(18,470 posts)I'm so glad the community is making use of it instead of letting it fall apart and be torn down. The art work, the organ, the stained glass have made it a real treasure.