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Past Stolen Pioneer St Mary's VETERAN Cemetary, Ventura needs help!
Ventrura County Star ^ | 01-10-07 | Steven Schleder

Posted on 10/11/2007 4:33:54 PM PDT by cowboy_code

Past Stolen Pioneer St Mary's VETERAN Cemetary, Ventura needs help!

Calling ALL Veterans, and concerned citizens.
For you kind attention on this sad matter. Our elected officials will try to do everything they can to CONTINUE the current Ventura's policy of desecrating some 3000 past Ventura citizen's historic resting places. The area is now a public park and NOT St. Mary's Cemetery & Ventura's Cemetery as it was in the late '50's.

***ATTN: What is extremely shameful with St Marys (downtown ventura Calif) is that some of the many veterans interments are of real American heroes. There are several Medal Of Honor winners from the Civil War and the Indian Wars still lying there. That is the same public park area were people walk their doggies so that the dogs can relieve themselves on this park property everyday. Go to the website and read the facts! Get involved please.
Tell a friend, tell a veteran, tell a history buff about this attrocious matter that crys out to be solved.

A informative story on the problems of stolen St Mary's Pioneer Cemetary in downtown Ventura.

Historical preservationist Steven Schleder founded the Restore St. Mary's Cemetery movement. Mr. Schleder has researched the history of the cemetery desecration, the subsequent mis-treatment of the grounds and graves. He has established a web site disseminating information about the restoration project.
His web site, http://www.restorestmarys.org


This site includes the list of the 3,000+ Catholics, Protestants, Chinese, Jewish and native Chumash people buried in the cemetery located between Main and Poli Streets, one mile east of the Mission San Buenaventura.

Last Memorial Day, Mr. Schleder organized and funded an historical 1893 funeral procession re-enactment, complete with a 6-horse team military caisson, Confederate and Union troops, and a black powder canon salute to honor Major General William Vandever, war veterans and all the people buried at what is now called public city park.

Other processions have occured on Veteran's Days. Their historical funeral procession re-enactment runs from Mission San Buenaventura, east on Main Street, to the park. "Historic Procession Honoree" has been the Congressional Medal of Honor recipient James Sumner, Company G, 1st Cavalry, who died in Ventura in 1912. Also present for past funeral processions was "Presidents Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt and Ulysses S. Grant." "John Calvin Brewster" and 25 other locally historic people, who are buried at St Marys, were reenacted by the "Tale Spinners" historical group. Past Special Honorary Veteran Guest and Speaker for these processions was Colonel Lewis Millet, WW2 and Congressional MoH recipient of the Korean Conflict, a local resident. All area residents and veterans are extended a very special invitation to join the procession. Also invited are the descendants and friends of those buried in St Marys public park. -

A News article- Grave Error
On June 24, the Ventura County Grand Jury cleared the city of allegations that it had concealed public documents regarding Cemetery Memorial Park but, as writer Michel Cicero found while researching this story, for many, these issues are far from resolved. By Michel Cicero


On a recent June-gloomy Saturday, three 20-somethings armed with shovels and cameras gathered at the edge of a Ventura barranca where it’s been rumored that, some 30 years ago, city employees quietly dumped hundreds of valuable and historic tombstones into the dirt and brush. That their pilgrimage had a Nancy Drew quality wasn’t lost on the trio as they prowled the perimeter of someone’s driveway to access the hillside, but knowledge of the very real issues comprising the Case of the Desecrated Graves would lend a sobering element to what they would soon discover.


The story, which has many beginnings and may never properly end, has garnered increasing public interest, thanks to the efforts of its chief protagonist (or antagonist, take your pick), Ventura resident Steve Schleder. The professional architecture restoration expert, historic preservationist and militant Catholic has spent untold hours and several thousand dollars attempting to right what he and others consider a mighty wrong: the city of Ventura’s removal of approximately 600 bought-and-paid-for grave markers and headstones of pioneer families and war heroes laid to rest in what is now officially referred to as Cemetery Memorial Park. The cemetery was converted to a park in the mid-1960s, and the remains of approximately 3,000 people were left underneath the lush grass. The idea to convert the cemetery to a park was tossed around as early as 1938, but no significant action was taken until 1955, when the city purchased the western 110 feet from the Los Angeles Archdiocese to build a recreation center and parking lot. Later, the recreation center failed structurally and was eventually removed.


Looking back at City Council minutes from the mid-’60s, it appears that by 1964 the wheels of progress were turning at high speed with at least one new development per week approved by the city. The cemetery, which had by all accounts become unsightly, didn’t mesh with the growing city’s idea of modernity. Despite the fact that by law it was the city’s responsibility to maintain the cemetery, it was decided that a park would be a better use for the space, and plans for a conversion got the green light.


Sue Silver, state coordinator for California Saving Graves, state liaison of the State Cemetery and Funeral Bureau and State Office of Historic Preservation representative for Historic Cemeteries, told the VC Reporter via e-mail that it appears the cemetery was converted 'under the guise of creating a pioneer memorial park' by way of California Health and Safety Code Sec. 8825 to 8829. According to Silver, that specific law has been used in many instances to convert cemeteries to parks; however, that was not the intention of the legislation. 'California law is clear,' wrote Silver. 'The land remains dedicated to cemetery purposes as long as the remains are still in the ground ' To use a non-abandoned cemetery (where the remains still exist) as anything other than a cemetery is a violation of the law. Was then. Still is.'


Why there was a negligible outcry over the plan to remove all headstones, curbs, crypts and markers is anyone’s guess. It is possible that no one was paying attention and few were familiar with the law governing cemeteries. Nevertheless, hindsight is 20/20; and decades later, remaining descendants are joining with preservationists and veterans’ organizations to pressure the city into correcting this decision. The Parks and Recreation Commission, the seven-person committee that assists the City Council in decisions affecting the future of all city parks, surveyed 1,500 nearby homes to determine what residents would like to see done there. They received approximately 500 responses, the majority of which indicated a desire for no change though a significant percentage would like to see some sort of monument erected.


Problem is, there may be human remains beneath the parking lot. When the Catholic Church deeded the westernmost portion of what had been St. Mary’s Cemetery to the city for the recreation center, it claimed no one had ever been laid to rest there. However, there’s no accounting for the graves of numerous converted Chumash Indians believed to have been buried in the cemetery, and the edge of the grounds would be the likeliest place for their interment considering the Church’s hierarchal burial system; those considered most important were typically placed in the blessed center with the poor and marginalized pushed to the perimeter. Some have speculated that the statement no one was buried in the westernmost section of the cemetery could have actually translated to Native American Indians were buried there.


When Schleder lays a transparency of the cemetery’s plot plan, which he created from public records detailing the location of burial sites, over the top of an aerial photo of the park, he says that it clearly shows there were plots in the western 110-foot area. When the plot numbers are matched with city burial records, at least seven fall into the portion that is currently used as a parking lot. Perhaps more compelling is the plot plan used by engineers during construction of the recreation center. The plan does show graves in the western 110 feet but, curiously, the portion of the plan that includes the recreation center appears to have been cut away from the rest of the document. Missing documents and anonymous witnesses are the norm for this story and, until recently, few have entered the public arena. From the construction workers who dug up bones during excavation prior to the construction of the recreation center, to the city employees who recall the sudden disappearance of important records, it seems everyone knows someone who witnessed or participated on some level in cemetery-related high jinks.


Recently, an elderly woman who wished to remain anonymous told Ventura County Star columnist Colleen Cason that sometime in the early 1970s, she watched in horror from her backyard as city workers dumped hundreds of assorted grave markers into a barranca. The event was traumatic for her and, to date, she refuses to go on record with her testimony for fear of retribution. Pat Clark Doehner, a vocal supporter of cemetery restoration efforts, remembers when her cousin, Larry Rose, was taking a sculpture class at Ventura College in the early ’70s. Rose told her that students were directed to Hall Canyon, which runs perpendicular to the southeastern edge of Ventura High School, for free sculpture material. They were told, 'There’s marble up in Hall Canyon, go get it,' she said. And they did. The marble she referred to was, of course, the discarded headstones. The joke in Clark Doehner’s circle is that there’s no one she isn’t related to. A historian, Clark Doehner is currently writing a book about her ancestors, many of whom are buried in Cemetery Park. Clark Doehner says she was not contacted in 1964, when the city, according to current city officials, notified residents so they could retrieve family headstones. Neither were other Clarks living in Ventura at the time. Over the years, she’s only met one person who actually was notified, and according to that person, a descendant of the Hall family for whom the canyon was named, families were given two weeks to take possession of the stones. 'They were huge,' said Clark Doehner. 'She didn’t know what to do so she just let it go.' Huge indeed. And quite valuable. The curious three who recently traversed the barranca to investigate witness claims that hundreds of tombstones were dumped there can attest to that. Not only did they see a gargantuan granite stone with the inscription 'Johnson,' previously discovered by Schleder, they also unearthed a second stone, bearing only the word 'Leonard,' from the muddy terrain. To liberate the Johnson stone, which Schleder said he’s had appraised at $12,000, from the barranca and reunite it with its heirs' something Schleder fully intends to do 'would require a truck and a winch. Schleder says he knows of at least 50 other families interested in reclaiming the headstones of their ancestors.


The issues surrounding Cemetery Park are garnering attention from media and preservation agencies outside Ventura County, which could spell trouble for a city promoting itself as a cultural destination. In a letter to Ventura’s Parks and Recreation Department, San Buenaventura Conservancy President Cynthia Thompson urged the city to pay attention to possible legal and public relations ramifications. In light of what she called a 'growing consortium' of highly respected professionals joining Schleder’s effort to restore the cemetery, Thompson warned that it is in the city’s best interest to 'address the issue on a much larger scale in order to avert an extremely uncomfortable potential confrontation.' In a letter from Sue Silver, published at http://www.restorestmarys.org, she wrote that the only way to convince Ventura and other cities to act quickly on this sort of issue is to sue 'and get a court order to make them correct this gross violation of the public trust.' Former Rep. Robert J. Lagomarsino (R-Calif.), who has a relative buried at Cemetery Park, told city officials last year that he believes the city is responsible for rectifying the mistakes of its predecessors. Ventura City Manager Rick Cole is quick to point out that it’s a multifaceted issue requiring thoughtful consideration and public process, yet he and other city officials seem to have missed one aspect entirely: cemeteries and parks are not interchangeable. 'Personally, I think there’s a responsibility and opportunity to deal with the fact that we haven’t done a good job of being custodians of something more than a park, something more significant than a park, and I think we need to do that,' he said. But, as Thompson stated in her letter to the city, 'This is not a matter of returning the site to a cemetery, as it is legally a cemetery and may possibly not legally be authorized as a site for recreation.' Parks and Recreation Commissioner Mike Montoya stated publicly that 'right or wrong in terms of the actions of those before us, it is a park now and people enjoy it very much.' Sharon Troll, one of the commissioners who remains sympathetic to the restoration effort believes it serves a valid purpose as recreational space for the midtown area but wants to know what’s under that parking lot, even if it’s nothing but worms. Cole said that while it’s not beyond the realm of possibility that there are indeed remains there, he’s unsure what purpose it would serve to find out immediately. 'I don’t want to be obtuse here,' he said, 'but if people who are now dead have had cars drive over them for 40 years, exactly where is it entirely clear that we have a responsibility to move the asphalt forthwith?'


With so many variables, the consensus is that a full restoration, as Schleder’s pushing for, is unlikely. There has been discussion of replacing the headstones with flush bronze markers, but at an estimated $250 each, the city simply can’t afford it. Most agree that a monument would suffice. Troll would like to see a reflecting pond as well. But Schleder says it’s not enough. 'Putting a memorial there isn’t doing anything but giving the city an easy way out. It’s nothing more than a get-out-of-jail- or get-out-of-purgatory-free card,' he said.
Clark Doehner said she would be content with a monument but would also like to see a section of the cemetery used for returned headstones. 'I’ve had so many people call and say, ‘Hey, we’ve got a headstone. Where can we turn it in?’' Clark Doehner’s great-grandmother saved for a full year to purchase a headstone that is now nowhere to be found. Will the city be held legally responsible for the cemetery’s current state? Will the tombstones buried in Hall Canyon be retrieved? Will the remains of the city’s earliest denizens show up beneath the parking lot? As an exasperated Parks and Recreation Commissioner Suz Montgomery said at their last meeting, 'It doesn’t look like it’s near the end. I think we need to, pardon the expression, do a little digging.'

For more information visit http://www.restorestmarys.org


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; US: Alabama; US: California; US: Massachusetts
KEYWORDS: citygovernment; corruption; rottn; soldiers; veterans
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1 posted on 10/11/2007 4:34:01 PM PDT by cowboy_code
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To: cowboy_code

BTTT


2 posted on 10/11/2007 4:38:33 PM PDT by stephenjohnbanker (Pray for, and support our troops(heroes) !! And vote out the RINO's!!)
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To: cowboy_code

Horrendous, despicable, unconscionable are a few sentiments that come to mind. Wonder if the American Legion was contacted? The Indian community would be outraged if they knew this. The city probably has not felt a wrath like theirs. Perhaps it is time.


3 posted on 10/11/2007 4:50:26 PM PDT by oneamericanvoice (Support freedom! Support the troops! Surrender is not an option!)
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To: Rabid Dog

Ping


4 posted on 10/11/2007 5:00:00 PM PDT by BenLurkin
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To: cowboy_code
I was born at Foster Memorial Hospital during WWII. My Grandmother lived in an apartment overlooking the cemetery in the early 1960's.

I loved the historical aspects of the place even as a kid. It was also a fine place for birdwatching.

Once the city built the rec building and ripped out all the tombstones, and many of the trees and bushes it lost all of its charm. It's become a dreary place,indeed, what with its dog rutted Bermuda grass lawn and shabby 1960's Rec Center adjacent to it.

5 posted on 10/11/2007 5:40:39 PM PDT by Irish Queen (Nevada Gal)
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To: cowboy_code

bump


6 posted on 10/11/2007 5:44:46 PM PDT by VOA
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To: VOA

BUMPPO.


7 posted on 10/15/2007 10:54:27 AM PDT by cowboy_code (Note for visitors at Arafat's grave - first dance, THEN pee.)
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To: cowboy_code

BUMP


8 posted on 03/31/2008 1:28:45 PM PDT by cowboy_code (Note for visitors at Arafat's grave - first dance, THEN pee.)
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To: StarCMC

Posting this on CA PGR...


9 posted on 03/31/2008 1:30:41 PM PDT by rottndog (This tagline currently closed for maintenance and rehabilitation.)
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To: cowboy_code

Is there an article in the Ventura County Star about this?


10 posted on 03/31/2008 1:46:11 PM PDT by rottndog (This tagline currently closed for maintenance and rehabilitation.)
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To: rottndog

Yes, in a way. In the Ventura County Star’s Your News community writer’s area, (dated April 1st) there is an article about the St Marys group confronting Cardinal Mahony at Ventura’ Mission 225th anniversary lunch. I don’t have the link, try google.

St Marys group: wholeheartedly, encourage everyone to take part in demanding the restoration of these 3,000 graves by simply sending an email expressing your disgust and anger to one or all of the below addresses. You probably won’t get a reply from any of the Council members or from the City employees, but you will get a blessing from above for doing God’s work!:

City Manager: Rick Cole
rcole@ci.ventura.ca.us

City Council: Mayor Morehouse, Weir, Fulton, Brennan, Monahan, Andrews and Summers
citycouncil@ci.ventura.ca.us

City Park’s Manager: Mike Montoya
mmontoya@ci.ventura.ca.us

Ventura County Star Editor:
letters@venturacountystar.com

Op/Ed Editor of the Ventura County Star:
MRatcliff@venturacountystar.com

Editor of the Ojai-Ventura Voice:
editor@ov-voice.net


11 posted on 04/03/2008 12:48:16 PM PDT by cowboy_code (Note for visitors at Arafat's grave - first dance, THEN pee.)
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To: rottndog

Found it. Here is that article LINK:

http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2008/apr/01/venturas-desecrated-st-mary-cemetery-activists/


12 posted on 04/03/2008 12:51:16 PM PDT by cowboy_code (Note for visitors at Arafat's grave - first dance, THEN pee.)
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To: rottndog

At the time that this happened, it would have appeared in the “Ventura Star Free Press”, other wise know as the “Red Star”.


13 posted on 04/03/2008 1:01:46 PM PDT by Prowler Fowler (One loves to possess arms, though they hope never to have occasion for them.)
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To: cowboy_code

BTTT!!!

Just saw a story on the news Friday night. A headstone showed up by a dumpster—1600 pounds of granite. A concerned citizen took the time to find out where it was from, and turns out it was from this cemetery. This issue is not going to go away quietly. Stay tuned.


14 posted on 08/02/2009 4:46:01 PM PDT by rottndog (WOOF!!!!!)
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To: rottndog

Let’s keep this going and work together to find a solution to this matter. The 3000 buried in the dog urinal and toilet must be honored.

here is the latest disappointing Ventura city council bureaucratic redtape meeting where this issue is still being somewhat addressed.
Cemetery’s $250K Watered Down Scam.
The coming CEQA and the “Enviromental Impact Report” is the hill on which we fight, but to get your blood pumping, you might want to watch this most shameful and morally corrupt bunch of elected city officials.
It’s just shy of 2 hours, but very insightful into our modern secular world.
If we are extremists, as they say, for wanting to restore the cemetery to it’s original state, then they must admit that originally removing the headstones and desecrating the cemetery was an extreme action.
If wanting to restore the dignity and respect to the graves of our ancestors is an extremist view point, what do you call a city council and dog people that demand and encourage the daily desecration of these same graves?
Why are such godless fools deciding the fate of the most sacred religious burial grounds in our town, besides the Mission Cemetery?

“cut & paste LINK into your browser.
http://cityofventura.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?view_id=2&clip_id=545

Local TV cable show on this sad cemetery matter- Kalifornia Kaleidoscope- LINK:
“cut & paste LINK into your browser.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQDh5QQHhNg


15 posted on 08/05/2009 5:21:57 PM PDT by cowboy_code (Note for visitors at Arafat's grave - first dance, THEN pee.)
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To: cowboy_code

Thanks for that....watched the one cable segment...

Over 100 Civil War and Spanish American War Vets, including 2 Congressional Medal of Honor Recipients being incredibly disrespected to the yuppies can have a place for their dogs to $h!t!!!!

OUTRAGEOUS!

This can not and will not stand.


16 posted on 08/05/2009 5:51:40 PM PDT by rottndog (WOOF!!!!!)
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To: cowboy_code

I have contacted the Congressional Medal Of Honor Society and am waiting for a response. Don’t know if that route has been tried before.


17 posted on 08/06/2009 1:25:30 PM PDT by rottndog (WOOF!!!!!)
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To: rottndog

THANK YOU.
That’s a great idea...MoH society.
Everything has to be accessed and tried to FIGHT Ventura City. I would like many people to get active on this if possible. Local Freepers should be interested and help, if they can. There was a extra large turn-out at our local July 4th Tax Revolt events here, over 3,500 persons. I wonder how many of those folks know what buried pioneers and vets graves are suffering with for 50 years.... resting in a 50 year old dog toilet ??!!!!???

PS..I would like to keep this Ventura: RESTORE St Marys cemetery exchange for others to see and get more involved. But, I can share my email with you if you PM me here.


18 posted on 08/07/2009 10:47:14 AM PDT by cowboy_code (Note for visitors at Arafat's grave - first dance, THEN pee.)
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To: cowboy_code

Some of my friends have been up to scope out the park. There is movement afoot to hunt down any descendants of Pvt. Sumner and identify the vets and their descendants.

At this point, I think the quickest stop-gap measure would be to force the city to at least fence off and protect the cemetery. Any chance we could get some quotes on how much money it would cost to do that? I don’t think it would cost much, and maybe we could get some donations for that to take that argument away from the city council.

But then again, I don’t think cost is the real issue for the city...


19 posted on 08/07/2009 11:03:34 AM PDT by rottndog (Freedom IS NOT FREE--Let us NEVER FORGET those that have paid the highest price for it!)
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To: rottndog

More good stuff. Keep up your good work.
We got some Vet groups to sponsor buying or collecting the vet headstones. They cannot pay for the planting of the headstones on the property. That requires the city.
Maybe if ideas come from another new enthusiastic person from a large well-known vigorous group as yours, baby steps as cemetery fencing by donations will start a small crack in the city’s monolith holding back needed & overdue corrections.
The city gets hung-up on trivial miniscule matters, that causes any progress to be stopped. *Watch the city council video I sent you to see a good example for the red-tape stangle any decent progress.

PING..Hi Heels.


20 posted on 08/08/2009 11:18:30 AM PDT by cowboy_code (Note for visitors at Arafat's grave - first dance, THEN pee.)
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