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THE MANHATTAN BURIAL CRISIS OF 1822 MAKES EVERY CEMETERY TODAY SEEM AMAZING
Atlas Obscura ^ | October 22, 2015 | CASEY HEDSTROM

Posted on 10/25/2015 2:23:05 PM PDT by NYer

"View from Greenwood Cemetery, Brooklyn", 1881, by Rudolph Cronau

"View from Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn," 1881, by Rudolph Cronau. (Image: Public Domain/WikiCommons)

The 300-year-old graveyard at Trinity Church in Lower Manhattan today serves as a respite from the frenzy of the Financial District. Small groups of tourists wander the stone pathways, stepping occasionally onto the manicured lawn to peer more closely at tilting eighteenth century tombstones of notable New Yorkers, like Alexander Hamilton, laid to rest in Trinity in 1804 after succumbing to the wounds from his duel with Aaron Burr. A cursory examination of the standing tombstones and stone memorials might lead one to guess the two and a half acre yard holds the remains of perhaps one hundred individuals. Little evidence survives that by 1822, an estimated 120,000 bodies lay underneath.

One official report from that year did not bother to count. “The number of persons buried in this yard down to 1822 cannot be computed,” read the report. “But it is almost beyond belief.” Responding to the “offensive exhalations”  that rose from the yard in the late summer, the Common Council and its Board of Health passed a resolution in August prohibiting the further digging of graves at Trinity. Passersby complained of the awful stench, as did residents on nearby Wall and Lumber streets. The source of the smell was unmistakable–the decomposition of tens if not hundreds of shallowly buried corpses. Since July of that year an outbreak of yellow fever had assailed the old neighborhoods south and west of the church.

Trinity Church, c. 1920

Trinity Church, circa 1920. (Photo: Library of Congress)

As the summer of 1822 turned to autumn, New York’s body problem only worsened. A terrible odor emanated from Trinity Churchyard, lingering over Broadway and Rector Street. On the night of September 22nd, a local resident would later write in a letter to a leading doctor investigating the causes of that year’s yellow fever epidemic, one man–a Dr. Rosa–decided to take matters into his own hands. The desperate Dr. Rosa recruited a group of men to cover the graveyard in quicklime to speed up the process of decomposition. So offensive was the smell that the men, Dr. Rosa noted later, vomited “freely” as they worked through the night. 

Still, despite the city’s ban on new burials, many of the bodies were only interred two or three feet under the ground, and the odor of decay persisted. The ban at least tended to one problem–the near constant uncovering of buried bodies. In order to find new room to bury the dead in the vastly overcrowded yard, gravediggers would poke the ground with iron rods searching for thoroughly decayed and thus softened coffins to unearth. Once dug up, these older remains would then be removed to and piled in the graveyard’s charnel house, opening up space underground for the more recently dead.  

A marble marker at New York City Marble Cemetery used for those vaults without monuments

A marble marker at New York City Marble Cemetery used for those vaults without monuments. (Photo: Beyond My Ken/WikiCommons CC BY-SA 3.0)

New York’s burial crisis was not limited to the graveyard at Trinity. Dire reports were also issued on the conditions of the burial grounds at the North Dutch Church on William and Fulton streets, the Middle Dutch Church on Liberty and Nassau, and at St. Paul’s just north of Trinity. Nor was the crisis due solely to the influx of the dead in the wake of yellow fever epidemics, though the outbreaks exacerbated the problem. Contemporary observers noted that the dismal state of Trinity predated the first reported cases of yellow fever in the 1822 epidemic. How could Trinity Church, along with Manhattan’s other 21 burial grounds, possibly keep up with the city’s rapidly growing population of the dead?

Founded in 1697, the Episcopal Trinity Church began to bury its dead in an adjacent lot that had been established 30 years prior as a public burial ground for New Amsterdam. Over the next 125 years, Manhattan’s population grew twenty-five fold. By 1822, Trinity sat in the middle of a thriving commercial neighborhood, its modest yard holding more than a century’s worth of bodies.

New York City Marble Cemetery on 2nd Street between 2nd Avenue and 1st.

New York City Marble Cemetery, on 2nd Street between 1st and 2nd Avenues. (Photo: Eden, Janine and Jim/Flickr)

The development of New York continued without pause for the dead, even in times of epidemic. Greenwich Village, still very much a village in the early 19th century, became a destination for Lower Manhattanites fleeing the “infected districts” during outbreaks of yellow fever. Nonetheless, as the population soared and available space shrank, residents and local leaders alike knew that the city needed to address the bodies, ceaselessly piling up. In the burgeoning metropolis, even Manhattan’s underground was quickly becoming a real estate commodity.

While the odor of decaying bodies was unpleasant enough, New Yorkers also worried that the smell was quite literally making the people of the city sick. When the city suffered its five outbreaks of yellow fever between 1798 and 1822, the cause of the disease was still unknown. (Not until the late 19th century would doctors prove mosquitoes to be its carrier). In a desperate attempt to locate and stop the source of the 1822 epidemic, prominent New York doctors and city leaders noted that the fever’s first case was but a block away from Trinity on Washington and Rector streets. And until the outbreak ended with the first frosts of November, the disease would remain mostly concentrated in the neighborhood just west to the graveyard. Miasma, or polluting vapors that might arise from filth or decay, was long thought to be the cause of disease. The decaying bodies in Trinity churchyard, many of which belonged to victims of yellow fever, and the “noxious air” they produced, might very well be sickening local residents. Manhattan’s burial crisis became a public health crisis too.

The New York Marble Cemetery, with its entrance at 41 Second Avenue between 2nd and 3rd Streets in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan,

The New York Marble Cemetery, with its entrance at 41 Second Avenue, in Manhattan's East Village. (Photo: Beyond My Ken/WikiCommons CC BY-SA 3.0)

The city’s ban on further burials in Trinity’s yard was the first of many attempts to remedy Manhattan’s body problem. The same year, an ordinance passed forbidding burials south of Canal Street, save for those in already established family vaults. As the city grew, the burial boundary shifted upwards; first, in 1839, to 14th Street and by 1859, to 86th Street. To alleviate the strain of the public lot at Trinity and to lessen the believed harmful effects of miasma, the city continued to bury its indigent dead outside of the city limits in potter’s fields, including those located in what is now Washington Square Park and Bryant Square.

In 1830 and 1831, two new cemeteries–the first nonsectarian burial grounds in New York–also sprang up on what was then the edges of development: the New York Marble Cemetery in 1830 on Second Street near the Bowery and the similarly named New York City Marble Cemetery, a block away. (Both cemeteries still exist, but are only occasionally open to the public). In order to maximize space, bodies were stacked in thick family vaults underground. Above ground, the cemeteries, although not large, were pleasant places dotted with sporadic monuments reading the family names of those buried below. But soon enough Manhattan grew up around these spaces, and the vaults quickly filled up.

Map of Greenwood cemetery and surrounding streets, c. 1899

Map of Green-Wood Cemetery and surrounding streets, circa 1899. (Image: Public Domain/WikiCommons)

Of course, New Yorkers kept dying. Conceiving of the future of the city would involve not only accommodating its rapidly growing population, but also properly and sanitarily housing its dead. Not only was the ghastly scene at Trinity churchyard in 1822 unbefitting for an economic and cultural capital such as New York, it was intolerable for New Yorkers who wished to secure in perpetuity resting spots for their loved ones and themselves. But eternity was not, as it is now, a concept easily protected in Manhattan. Graveyards–prime real estate–were regularly sold to the highest bidders. Try as they may, the congregation of the German Reformed Church at University Place and 12th Street could not stop the sale and removal of bodies from their churchyard, a case they took to court in 1846 and lost.

Instead, New Yorkers looked to a new model of cemetery, like Mount Auburn outside of Boston and Laurel Hill in Philadelphia, and judged the rolling hills of Brooklyn just across from Lower Manhattan to be safe enough from the encroachment of urban development. In 1838, a group of prominent civic leaders founded Green-Wood Cemetery on 178 acres of land bought from old Brooklyn farming families. Over the next several decades, the “rural” cemetery would add another 300 acres, a far cry from the two and a half on which Trinity’s original churchyard sits. (In 1842, Trinity Church would establish its own rural cemetery in what is now Washington Heights). The cemetery would abandon not only the cramped dreariness and decay of the old churchyard, but also any sense of the city.

David Bates Douglass, the cemetery’s planner and its first president, designed Green-Wood as the ideal romantic landscape, sculpting its hillsides, planting trees and other vegetation, and giving its curving paths names like Evergreen, Petunia, Snowberry, and Verdant. By 1876 Harper’s Weekly could boast that Green-Wood was “the largest and most beautiful burial place on the continent.” 

An early photograph by George Bradford Brainerd of the Mount, Greenwood, Brooklyn, ca. 1872-1887.

An early photograph by George Bradford Brainerd of the Mount, Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, circa 1872-1887. (Photo: Public Domain/WikiCommons)

One needed to pay in order bury their dead, of course, in such a lovely, spacious cemetery. The problem of the impoverished dead and the public burial ground continued to vex city officials, and too, occasionally horrified New Yorkers. In 1858, a letter to the editor of the New York Times hoped to “call attention to our City authorities to the … coffins, skulls, and decayed bodies lying exposed on the corner of Fiftieth-street, and fourth-Avenue,” the site of a potter’s field. “Is our city always to be disgraced by some public exhibition?” the writer bemoaned.

Soon enough, in 1869, the city of New York would purchase Hart Island, which to this day remains the city’s public burial ground. The corpses of Manhattan, once a public crisis, would properly go underground, making room for a whole new set of urban pestilences and pollutants to emerge to beleaguer the city-dweller.

Today the grounds at Trinity, removed mostly from the hubbub of the surrounding neighborhood, feel appropriately respectful for a graveyard–at least by our modern standards. But the ways we now think about a ‘proper’ cemetery–and city too–were in large part shaped by a burial crisis nearly 200 years ago and the responses it invoked. For contemporary New Yorkers, routine assaults on the senses are considered something of an unavoidable byproduct of urban living. But the state of Trinity churchyard in 1822 is now hard to imagine. Today’s city dwellers are unlikely to think of the disposal of human corpses as a pressing urban problem, nor include the odor of bodily decay on a list of urban nuisances. But they should be grateful to early 19th century New Yorkers, who in grappling with their newfound realities of city life, solved the problem of the bodies–or at least, pushed the issue out of sight and mind.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; History; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: cemetary; newyork

1 posted on 10/25/2015 2:23:05 PM PDT by NYer
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To: NYer

Bookmark


2 posted on 10/25/2015 2:25:13 PM PDT by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: SunkenCiv

NEW  YORK MARBLE  CEMETERY

 


This small burial ground in Manhattan's East Village is sometimes called the Second Avenue Cemetery.  It is the oldest public non-sectarian cemetery in New York City.  Most of the 2,080 interments took place between 1830 and 1870; the last was in 1937.  All burials are in 156 below-ground vaults made of solid white Tuckahoe marble.  Although there are no gravestones, the names of the original owners are on plaques in the surrounding walls.  Their descendants may still be buried here.

The Cemetery's landscaped grounds are available for rental for small private parties and as a location for filming and photo shoots.  Contact the events coordinator for details.

The Cemetery is usually open to visitors on fourth Sundays, April through October, from 12 until 4, as well as several other weekends throughout the year.  Check the schedule as the time approaches.  Owners, neighbors, and researchers are all welcome.  In the event of heavy rain, please plan on another time.

This is one of two unrelated Marble Cemeteries.  The other is the New York City Marble Cemetery, around the corner.  It has its own web site with separate contact information.  Both are New York City Landmarks and on the National Register of Historic Places.

Brian Blakely of Brooklyn, a descendant-owner, visited on May 6, 2012.  Click here to enjoy his short video of the Cemetery on YouTube.

3 posted on 10/25/2015 2:25:14 PM PDT by NYer (Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy them. Mt 6:19)
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To: NYer

There are strange things done in the midnight sun
By the men who moil for gold;
The Arctic trails have their secret tales
That would make your blood run cold;
The Northern Lights have seen queer sights,
But the queerest they ever did see
Was that night on the marge of Lake Lebarge
I cremated Sam McGee.

— Robert W. Service


4 posted on 10/25/2015 2:25:25 PM PDT by ClearCase_guy (I've switched. Trump is my #1. He understands how to get things done. Cruz can be VP.)
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To: NYer; Larry Lucido; SaveFerris; FredZarguna; PROCON

I want something like that on my tombstone.


5 posted on 10/25/2015 2:33:54 PM PDT by Gamecock (Preach the gospel daily, use words if necessary is like saying Feed the hungry use food if necessary)
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To: NYer

Fascinating...

A grave situation with shallow hope that brought to the living a stench of departed loves ones.


6 posted on 10/25/2015 2:42:21 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously-you won't live through it anyway-Enjoy Yourself ala Louis Prima)
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To: NYer

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=79llXVDWbCQ


7 posted on 10/25/2015 3:01:41 PM PDT by davetex (Location: The Alamo)
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To: NYer

Absolutely fascinating. In the early 90’s I worked at St. Elizabeth’s (formerly the U.S. Government Hospital fo r the Insane) in Anacostia, D.C.

It was established prior to the Civil War (some amazing, but now decaying architecture), and until Arlington (R.E. Lee’s home) was taken as a cemetery, Civil War dead were buried where ever there was space. In walking the grounds, I came across several places where 5 to 10 were buried, their names and Army units barely visible on the headstones.

It was a beautiful place, landscaped since 1855. It was, though, in the middle of D.C.’s war zone.


8 posted on 10/25/2015 3:35:21 PM PDT by Tijeras_Slim
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To: NYer

I’ve been by this cemetery dozens of times and never knew.

It may just be me, but when I visit these old cemeteries (as I have in the historic parts of Boston), there is always a “smell” that reminds me of plastic grocery bags.


9 posted on 10/25/2015 3:42:19 PM PDT by llevrok (To liberals, Treason Is the New Patriotism)
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To: NYer

I am safe. I will never live in NY.

I have wondered though, as crowded as this earth is with the living how many dead are scattered beneath the turf?

This was an oh my goodness factoid from the article:

“Little evidence survives that by 1822, an estimated 120,000 bodies lay underneath.”


10 posted on 10/25/2015 3:52:11 PM PDT by Sequoyah101 (It feels like we have exchanged our dreams for survival. We just have a few days that don't suck.)
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To: CatherineofAragon; ConjunctionJunction; Hot Tabasco

This problem would be fixed in the Walking Dead universe.


11 posted on 10/25/2015 4:22:11 PM PDT by Lazamataz (Ok. We won't call them 'Anchor Babies'. From now on, we shall call them 'Fetal Grappling Hooks'.)
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To: Lazamataz; CatherineofAragon; ConjunctionJunction
This problem would be fixed in the Walking Dead universe.

That is true........with that being said, I'm glad I'm growing old in this time and didn't have to live thru those times..........

12 posted on 10/25/2015 4:44:49 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco (<i>)
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To: NYer

bfl


13 posted on 10/25/2015 5:00:48 PM PDT by pigsmith
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To: NYer

Interesting read! Thanks for posting it all.

In November 1960, I was 18 and in the Navy. I was assigned to CVA-42 in the Brooklyn Navy Shipyard. ...Flew from Charleston to La Guardia and then took a bus heading for the NYC Port Authority bus station. Along the way I saw left of that road the largest cemetery I’d ever seen. ...There were headstones as far as I could see and they seemed to go on for miles.


14 posted on 10/25/2015 6:14:38 PM PDT by octex
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To: octex
Along the way I saw left of that road the largest cemetery I’d ever seen. ...There were headstones as far as I could see and they seemed to go on for miles.

Calvary Cemetery is a Roman Catholic cemetery in Maspeth and Woodside, Queens, in New York City, New York, United States. With about 3 million burials, it has the largest number of interments of any cemetery in the United States; it is also one of the oldest cemeteries in the United States. It covers 365 acres and is owned by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York and managed by the Trustees of St. Patrick's Cathedral.

Some of my ancestors are buried there.

15 posted on 10/25/2015 7:59:40 PM PDT by NYer (Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy them. Mt 6:19)
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To: NYer

See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colma,_California


16 posted on 10/25/2015 9:52:05 PM PDT by US Navy Vet (I could Be a "Chump" for Trump, but right now I am still on "Cruz-Control"!)
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To: NYer

Thanks for the reply. 365 acres!


17 posted on 10/26/2015 2:41:29 PM PDT by octex
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