Midland Cemetary Project: Difference between revisions

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The students and professors of the American Mosaic Semester at Dickinson College were fortunate enough to get to know a special member of the Steelton community, Barbara Barksdale. She has undertaken a major respons ibility in the community by beginning to clear away an African-American Cemetery which was covered over by weeds and trees. The Midland Cemetery, which dates back to the Civil War period, is located in Swatara Townhip, just outside Steelton, PA. The lar ger part of Midland had been buried under weeds and brush for 35 years before Barbara and her 11 year old son ventured into the cemetery in 1993. Barbara recollected: "When I was a little girl, my parents would come here after church on Sunday. Because I had allergies, they'd roll up the windows and leave me in this hot car while they disappeared into the brush--I'd sit and wait. Well, I was 35 when I came back here to see where they had gone on these Sunday afternoons to visit with Grandpa--and here I am...I thought was just that little corner of a cemetery...I started researching and pulling up the old deeds from 1932. And it just expanded. Thank God it expanded without my knowledge, because I don't know if I would have been able to stand out here right now and talk to you. Because I didn't know it was this big. And I didn't know what kind of work I was getting into, and what kind of history I was going to open up." Many of the neighbors did not even know that the cemetery was there. At this ti me, Barbara decided to clean up this "corner cemetery" a little every day and figured that it would be in good shape by Spring.
The students and professors of the American Mosaic Semester at Dickinson College were fortunate enough to get to know a special member of the Steelton community, Barbara Barksdale. She has undertaken a major respons ibility in the community by beginning to clear away an African-American Cemetery which was covered over by weeds and trees. The Midland Cemetery, which dates back to the Civil War period, is located in Swatara Townhip, just outside Steelton, PA. The lar ger part of Midland had been buried under weeds and brush for 35 years before Barbara and her 11 year old son ventured into the cemetery in 1993. Barbara recollected: "When I was a little girl, my parents would come here after church on Sunday. Because I had allergies, they'd roll up the windows and leave me in this hot car while they disappeared into the brush--I'd sit and wait. Well, I was 35 when I came back here to see where they had gone on these Sunday afternoons to visit with Grandpa--and here I am...I thought was just that little corner of a cemetery...I started researching and pulling up the old deeds from 1932. And it just expanded. Thank God it expanded without my knowledge, because I don't know if I would have been able to stand out here right now and talk to you. Because I didn't know it was this big. And I didn't know what kind of work I was getting into, and what kind of history I was going to open up." Many of the neighbors did not even know that the cemetery was there. At this ti me, Barbara decided to clean up this "corner cemetery" a little every day and figured that it would be in good shape by Spring.


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"Everywhere you see a headstone, you know a whole life story is buried."
"Everywhere you see a headstone, you know a whole life story is buried."
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Revision as of 12:56, 28 August 2009