27. OAKLAND CEMETERY,
bounded by Oakland Ave., Memorial Drive, Boulevard, and the Georgia
Railroad line, lies peaceful and quiet within the brick walls that
separate it from a busy industrial section. In this old cemetery, owned
and well cared for by the city, the weathered tombs and monuments are
crowded close together, the somber whiteness of their irregular shapes
accentuated against the dark green of the shrubbery and the magnificent
old magnolia and oak trees.
Atlanta's first cemetery was a small plot at the corner of
Peach-tree and Baker Streets. As early as October of 1849, however, the
little town of Atlanta had grown to such an extent that it became
necessary to find a cemetery site farther removed from town and
consolidate the public and private burial plots. Several "graveyard
committees" were appointed by the city council to find a suitable
location, and on June 6, 1850, six acres of wooded land were purchased
in what is now the southwest corner of the cemetery. Additional tracts
were bought from time to time until the area covered 83 acres.
Promptly after the purchase of the first six acres the bodies were
removed from the old plots to the new cemetery. On February 21, 1851,
the city council elected a sexton and instructed a surveyor to lay off
lots and build a suitable enclosure around the grounds. One of the
items listed in the city treasurers report on January 1, 1853, was a
hearse purchased by the city for $129.50. In 1896 the ground was
enclosed by a red-brick wall, and the gates were built at the Oakland
Avenue and Fair Street (Memorial Drive) entrances. From 1907 until
1932, when Oakland was placed under the direction of the park board,
the affairs of the cemetery were regulated by a committee of five lot
owners elected by the city council. This committee published a book of
rules, among other things prohibiting the burial of animals in the
cemetery, the erection of fences around lots, and the decoration of
graves with shells and other small ornaments.
Since no more lots are available, the cemetery is considered full
and only a few interments are made in spaces reserved in old family
lots and mausoleums or where an exhumation has been made. In the
northeastern corner, across from the Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills, an
apparently vacant grassy area of about two acres is filled with
unmarked graves. Now that there is no longer any income from the sale
of lots, the maintenance of the cemetery is provided entirely by an
annual city appropriation.
Many mausoleums and monuments bear the names of pioneer settlers of
Marthasville and Atlanta and citizens who have figured prominently in
the history of the State. A large block of native granite marks the
grave of Martha Lumpkin Compton, daughter of Governor Wilson Lumpkin,
in whose honor Atlanta was once called Marthasville. In the northwest
corner is the grave of Julia Carlisle Withers, who was the first baby
born in the little settlement, and in another part of the cemetery is
buried Benjamin Franklin Bomar, Atlanta's second mayor. Near the
sexton's office stands a granite monument erected by the cemetery
commission in 1916 as a memorial to Atlanta's first mayor, Moses W,
Formwalt, who took office in 1848. Near by is the grave of James
Russell Barrick, Atlanta's first poet and first editor of the Atlanta Constitution.
Near the geographical center of the cemetery, in a section set aside
for Confederate soldiers, rises a 65-foot shaft of granite blocks
erected in memory of the Confederate dead in 1873 by the Ladies
Memorial Association. Also prominent among the low headstones is the Lion of Atlanta, which
was unveiled on April 26, 1894, by the same organization to honor the
unknown soldiers who fell fighting. The figure of the dying lion
reclining upon broken guns and a furled Confederate flag was inspired
by the famous Lion of Lucerne and carved from a single block of Georgia
marble by T.M. Brady, of Canton, Georgia.
Not far away from the Confederate shaft are the graves of General
Clement A. Evans and General John B. Gordon. Other prominent men buried
in Oakland Cemetery include Benjamin H. Hill, William J. Northen, Hoke
Smith, General William A. Wright, and Captain William Allen Fuller, who
led the party that pursued and overtook the engine General when
it was stolen by Andrews and his Union raiders. Seven of Andrews' men,
who were hanged as spies in Atlanta in June 1863, were first buried in
Oakland and later removed to the national cemetery in Chattanooga,
Tennessee. Alexander H. Stephens, Vice President of the Confederate
States, was interred here in 1883, but his body was later moved to his
old home at Crawfordville.
Many of the monuments are interesting because of their eloquent
inscriptions or unusual design. Besides the conventional carved pillows
and draperies, there are many stone lambs, cherubim, and angelic
heralds, and several mausoleums look like miniature cathedrals, with
their spires and pointed stained-glass windows. Among the oddities is a
statue of Jasper N. Smith seated above the door of his mausoleum.
Because he never wore a collar or tie, Smith had these omitted from the
statue, which he ordered carved and placed on the mausoleum some time
before his death. When a vine grew up and entwined the neck of the
statue concealing its bareness, he forthwith ordered it cut. The
smallest plot in the cemetery contains the grave of "Tweet," a pet
mocking bird that died in 1874. As the stonecutter was unable to carve
the figure of a mocking bird, Tweet's mistress had to content herself
with a lamb on the tiny monument.
Like most old cemeteries, Oakland has its share of graveyard legends
concerning nocturnal phenomena—weird drum beats heard in the
Confederate section, sobbing, harsh metallic gratings like vault doors
opening, and mysterious knockings. Perhaps some of the stories were
inspired by a sensational occurrence at the first burial service held
in the cemetery, that of James Nissen in the fall of 1850. Obsessed
with the fear of burial alive, Nissen had requested his surgeon friend,
Dr. Charles D Alvigny, to sever his jugular vein just before his body
was lowered into the grave, and this service was performed, to the
horror of witnesses.
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