| |
.jpg)
Visiting
the graves of one's
ancestors can bring with it a certain peace of mind that
comes with paying homage to the lives and spirits of those who came before --
knowing that here, on this plot of earth, their journey finally ended.
It can remind us too, as perhaps nothing else can, of how short our time on
this Earth really is, of how we'll all end up just as they did -- ashes and dust
and memories.
Where, we
wondered, did Bailey T. Baldwin find his final resting place? What
of his beloved wife, Margaret Bleau dit Rossignal Bottineau Baldwin? And
their daughter, the one who cared for them throughout their declining years, Lucy
Baldwin McClure Doyle?
If you search for "Bailey T. Baldwin"
on
Ancestry.com, an item will appear under the heading
"Minnesota Cemetery Inscription Index."
Clicking on that item will provide the following
information:
|
BAILEY T. BALDWIN VET
GAR 224 3 B
|
This tells you that Bailey T. Baldwin was a
veteran of the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR, or
Union Army). It also gives you the precise
coordinates of his grave. What it doesn't tell you
is which cemetery.
Since there are about 82,000
cemeteries
scattered across the length and breadth of
Minnesota, and dozens of them in and around the Twin
Cities, this information on the location of Bailey's
grave seemed, well, useless. Fortunately, the
entry on Bailey T. Baldwin is accompanied by
a citation. So Mike googled "John Danby Minnesota Cemetery Inscription
Index" and, thanks to the Owatanna Public Library,
found the full listing.
Bailey, it turns
out, was buried in Hillside Cemetery in Minneapolis
-- the same cemetery in which Nellie Kinsman Lang
Blowe Church was buried, and just a stone's throw
east of Bailey's house at 716 Lincoln Ave.
So Mike emailed Bailey' s
great-great-granddaughter Jeane Morneau DeCoursey to
tell her the good news. She'd been wanting to
find Bailey's grave for a very long time.
Delighted, Jeane told Mike that she and
her husband Bill were heading out to Hillside
Cemetery the very next day.
"I
am so excited about this!" wrote Jeane.
The next
evening, Mike received the following email:
Well Bill and
I went to Hillside Cemetery.
Went to the office with my list
of Baldwins. The lady there was
more into sales than into
wanting to look up old grave
plots.
She did find
Bailey T, Margarite, Lucy Doyle
and Mayme Bladwin. Mayme is
Irwin's wife and Irwin is Frank
J. Baldwin's son.
She said that
she didn't have an Irwin Baldwin
there. I told her that his death
certificate stated that he was
buried at Hillside. She told
Bill and I to look around by
Mayme's grave and maybe we would
find it, and let them know if we
did. We found it and we let them
know about it. They said they
would check it out and give us a
call if that was right. How
stupid, I took a photo of both
Irwin and Mayme Baldwin's
gravestones.
I hate to
tell you this Mike, we could not
find any gravestones for Bailey
T., Margarite and Lucy Doyle.
When we were
at the office, I asked if they
had gravestones. Ladies reply
was that she had no way of
knowing, so we would just have
to go out there and try to find
the grave plot.
I was so
disappointed in not finding
their gravestones. It was so
hard to even know where they
might be located. The map they
give you is so hard to figure
out. All we know is that Bailey
T. and Margarite are side by
side. Lucy is very close to
where they are too.
This is what
is stated on the cards:
Interment
No.
Name
Age
4160 Bailey
T. Baldwin 83
years
Lot
224 Sec.
B Grave 3
7" 9"F
Date of
death Dec. 19th, 1904 Date
of Burial April 25th, 1905
Remarks-
Reception House, Dec 21st, 1904
Interment
No
Name
Age
3046 Margarite
Baldwin 74 years
Lot
224 Sec.
B Grave 2
Date of
Death March 31st 1900 Date
of Burial April 25, 1900
Remarks
Reception House, April 3rd,
1900
Interment
No.
Name
Age
5515 Lucy
Doyle
58 years
Lot
472 Sec.
B Grave 1
1'6" F
Date of
Death July 24, 1910 Date
of Burial July 26, 1910
Bill did take
a photo of this rock or stone
that could be Bailey or
Margarite but not certain at all
about that.
We tried. I'm
thinking maybe Tom might have
more luck trying to find it.
Well let me
know what you think.
Take care.
Jeane and
Bill
|
|
Here are Bill's photos of the stone in question:


Photos of what might possibly be the
remains of Bailey T.
Baldwin's or Margaret Baldwin's headstone, Hillside Cemetery,
Minneapolis, courtesy of William D. DeCoursey
"Bill is so sure that that could be
Bailey T. or Margarite," wrote Jeane. "Not me it just looks like nothing
to me."
I'd have to go with Jeane
on this one, concluded Mike.
What to do in the face of a such a heart-wrenching
dead-end? Give up? Abandon all hope? No! -- what you do
is, you call Tom! Bless his heart, Tom can be infernally
stubborn when he wants to be. Resolute as a mule -- you should see him tear out a
dormer wall! (Photos available upon request; video clips
forthcoming.) If Bailey's gravestone exists, if it still bears an inscription, Mike thought, Tom
will find it.
Hillside Cemetery, it should be noted, is absolutely huge, one of
the oldest
and biggest cemeteries in Minneapolis, featuring
"one
hundred and twenty acres of rolling green hills, enormous oaks, maples and
evergreens, and a breathtaking view overlooking the Minneapolis skyline,"
according to their website (which, sadly, does not include a map).
One hundred and twenty acres?!? With maybe a couple of hundred
graves per acre, that's a whole lot of acres, and a whole lot of graves.
And, with a staff seemingly more interested in peddling new plots than
in helping the descendents of their onetime customers find their
ancestors' graves -- and with maps crying out for updating and
clarification
-- it's no
wonder Jeane & Bill had such a hard time.
(Right: Magnificently airbrushed photo
of the exquisitely maintained 65 foot Bell Tower at Hillside Cemetery, from their website, www.hillside-cemetery.com)
.jpg)
Entrance,
Hillside Cemetery, Minneapolis; the lovely flowerbeds and
attractive façades offer a
distinctive contrast to longterm conditions in the older
sections of the cemetery; photo by Tom
Unfortunately, Tom's
initial forays brought him no more luck than Jeane & Bill had
had. After spending an hour or so walking the length and breadth
of Section B, and looking at every headstone along the way, he phoned
Mike to tell him what he planned to do next. So, while we wait for
Tom to put the heat on 'em
at the main office (this being a family-oriented website we
cannot say exactly what that means, though we can refer you to the "alternative interrogation techniques"
recently sanctioned by the president), we thought we'd show you one of
their maps -- maps that would be helpful were they actually
representative of what one actually finds when one actually walks the
actual grounds:

Official Map, Hillside Cemetery, Minneapolis (click on
image for larger view)
After an hour or so,
Tom called back to
report that the lady in the main office seems to have little actual
knowledge of the cemetery's actual layout, had no
idea where the gravestones were, and said that if he wanted to find
Section B, Lot 224 he had to follow the map. So Tom returned to
Section B, but all he could find in the vicinity of what appeared to be Lot 224 were two nondescript stones
embedded in the grass --
doubtless the same stones Bill DeCoursey had photographed two days
before. Then Tom said
there was
only one thing left to do: start digging! So he grabbed his pick and shovel and started in . . .
(Right: Tom's determination to find Bailey's grave came as
something of a shock to the staff at Hillside Cemetery)
All
the while Mike was trying to figure out what the
blazes was going on. As best as he could reckon, John Danby, the compiler of
the Minnesota Cemetery Inscription Index, could not have merely
sat in various cemetery offices with his laptop, tapping in data from
the index cards. His entry for Bailey T. Baldwin says "VET GAR" -- information that does not appear
on Bailey's Hillside Cemetery index card. John Danby must
have gotten at least some of his information directly from the
gravestone. Which in turn meant that there had to be a
gravestone, somewhere . . . there could be no other explanation . . .
Meanwhile, Tom looked in Section B, Lot
472 for Lucy Doyle's
grave and found nothing -- no headstone, no remnant of what was once the
base of a headstone -- nothing except a little concrete marker half
buried in the grass indicating the
lot number (we were kidding about the pick & shovel, but not about this
or what follows).
(Right:
concrete marker no. 472 indicating the location Lucy Doyle gravesite at
Hillside Cemetery)
So Tom went
back to the main office again. The lady told him that sometimes
the headstones fall over and sink into the grass, but if he had
something to poke into the ground, like a stick or something, he could
try poking into the earth to find the fallen stone.
So Tom returned to Section B, Lot 472, got down on his hands and
knees, and started hitting the ground with his hammer. To the
right -- to the left -- forward -- backward -- smashing his hammer into
the soft moist grass. A passing maintenance worker saw him, walked
over and asked, "So whatcha doin' there?" Tom described
his dilemma. So the maintenance worker kindly got out his shovel
and started poking around with him, plunging his shovel all around Lot
472. All around the two of them poked and plunged. Eight --
ten -- twelve inches deep. "Huh," said the maintenance worker,
wiping the sweat from his brow after 10 or 15 minutes of determined
poking. "Guess it's not here."
Tom's photographs of Section B of Hillside Cemetery show what
dilapidated condition it's in, with headstones toppled over, broken
in half, laying on the grass, and many missing altogether.
.jpg)
Hillside Cemetery,
Minneapolis, all taken by Tom, Sept 2006
Repeatedly querying the lady in the main office
-- using, we
should note, not a single "alternative interrogation technique"
(we were kidding about that, too) but only
his abundant native Minnesota charm, combined with a steely determination
to discover the truth -- Tom finally dragged it out of her.
When headstones fall over, she acknowledged, what they generally do, their standard procedure in such
cases, is to pitch them into the trash, leaving behind only the bases on
which they once stood. Then she tried to sell him the lot adjacent
to no. 472.
"You're in luck!" she exclaimed. "It's just opened up!"
.jpg)
Detail of Section B,
Hillside Cemetery, showing the relative locations of the graves of
Bailey T. & Margaret Baldwin and their daughter Lucy Doyle;
photo of this area appears below
So now we know what happened to Bailey, Margaret, and Lucy's
headstones. They fell over, and Hillside Cemetery threw them away.
(That would explain John Danby's database -- he retrieved the
information "VET GAR" from Bailey's gravestone before it tumbled over and Hillside Cemetery
pitched it.)
That seems really negligent. Disrespectful. Criminal
even. What about fulfilling your contract? What about
respecting the spiritual needs of the living, not to mention the dignity of the dead?
We
understand that cemeteries like Hillside have tight budgets and
limited resources. We understand that the maintenance budget might
be too small to include the repair of headstones that have fallen over
or broken in half. But there would seem to be a number of simple and inexpensive solutions to the problem of fallen or damaged
headstones:
For instance:
what would be so hard about digging out a bit
of earth and embedding the fallen headstone, face up, into the grass?
(That way the grass-cutters could still zip around on their lawn mowers
and wouldn't have to waste valuable time weed-whacking.) Or, what
about taking a snapshot of a fallen headstone before pitching it into
the garbage, and then filing the snapshot with the grave's index card?
Or, at minimum, keeping a record of which headstones they've pitched?
Surely there's money enough in the budget for a few disposable cameras,
or a pencil and a pack of 3x5 cards.
(Right: General vicinity under which
lie the remains of Bailey T. Baldwin and Margaret Rushenall Baldwin,
Hillside Cemetery, Minneapolis)
What we discovered, in short, is that the headstones of Bailey T.
Baldwin, Margaret Bleau dit Rosignal Bottineau Baldwin, and Lucy Baldwin
McClure Doyle do not exist. Or, better said, that they do exist,
somewhere, buried under tons of garbage at some landfill, but that they're not where they're supposed to be -- atop
the remains of Bailey T. Baldwin, Margaret Bleau dit Rosignal Bottineau
Baldwin, and Lucy Baldwin McClure Doyle at Hillside Cemetery in
Minneapolis.
By way
of consolation, at least now we know where Bailey, Margaret, &
Lucy found their final resting places. And, that if we want to
spend a few quiet moments near those places, paying our respects to
their lives and spirits, amidst the towering oaks and magnificent maples
and crumbling headstones, we can. And that is no small thing to
have learned.
.jpg)
Top of Page
|
|