Located
at the crossroads of Route 202 and Pope Road, it’s an unassuming, pocket-sized
expanse of ground dotted with dark colored field stone – Windham’s Old Quaker
Burial Ground.
Forty-seven
years ago, overgrown with small trees, litter and shrubs, it was in danger of
being topped with new housing, possibly an apartment building. Builder, Mark
Plummer had purchased the lot and started clearing it when passers-by stopped
to protest. “That spot is an old cemetery,” they declared. Word of the
“desecration” spread throughout the community; questions and complaints
inundated the town office.
The old Quaker Burial Ground on Route 202 and Pope Road |
Plummer
indicated that there had been no mention of a cemetery at the time of purchase,
and that a deed search had also turned up nothing.
A
concerned family who lived close to the ancient cemetery contacted the Windham
Historical Society. Then-president Phil Kennard (who, ironically, often contracted
with the same builders, F.S. Plummer Homes, Inc., as their carpenter) called a
special meeting of the Society where it was voted “to do everything possible to
stop such a thing from happening.”
Ultimately,
society member Charles LeGrow (whose descendants were buried there) was
credited with saving the cemetery. LeGrow produced old maps and other
documented evidence of the burial ground’s existence. Also found were
hand-written records of the names of Quaker families interred there; many are
immortalized by road names: Pope, Read, Varney, Webb and Swett. Others include
Allen, Mayberry and Hawkes.
But
there was yet another twist in the controversy. Old-timers around Windham
generally agreed that many, or possibly all, of the graves in the Old Burial Ground
had long ago been moved to another nearby Quaker, or Friends, cemetery located
several hundred feet away and across 202, nearer the Friends Meeting House
Church. No one knew for sure.
By
this time, Plummer, the builder, was assuring Windhamites that there would be
“absolutely no building going on at all.” And further, he offered to build a
split-rail fence around the cemetery, survey the property and turn over
ownership to the town.
The
corner cemetery at Windham Center was saved. The concerned citizens could be
proud of their preservation efforts, and the simple elegance of their
rehabilitated piece of history and heritage. It was decided to hold a special
rededication; a decision that would ignite another controversy.
Would
the conservative Quakers of a much earlier time have approved of such pomp and
pizazz?
Next
time, in part 2, more on the Quakers of Windham Center. Should the town
celebrate their rediscovery? And who decides?
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