Centerville Pioneer Cemetery
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Centerville Pioneer Cemetery, also known as the Centerville Presbyterian Cemetery or Alameda Presbyterian Cemetery, is located at the corner of Post Street and Bonde Way in Fremont, California. It was officially designated as a state cemetery in 1858 or 1859, depending upon the source, and was listed in the
California Register of Historic Resources The California Register of Historical Resources is a California California government, state government program for use by state and local agencies, private groups, and citizens to identify, evaluate, register and protect California's history, hist ...
in 1976.


History

At the time the cemetery was established, the location of the cemetery was known as
Washington Township, Alameda County, California Washington Township is a former township of Alameda County, California in the San Francisco Bay Area region, which includes the present day cities of Union City, Fremont, and Newark. The first permanent settlement in the area was Mission San Jo ...
, which was then made up of the villages of Mission San Jose, Irvington, Warm Springs, Centerville, Niles, Newark, Alvarado and Decoto. In time all eight villages became towns of the same names, and both the church and cemetery were renamed to reflect their location in the town of Centerville. A century later in 1956, the five towns of Centerville, Niles, Irvington, Mission San Jose, and Warm Springs came together to form the incorporated City of Fremont, which is the current designation of the location of the Cemetery. The first burials occurred sometime after 1855 when the Alameda Presbyterian Church, first organized in 1853, acquired the property in the summer of 1855 under the direction of the Rev. William Wallace Brier and nine other founding members.Tri City Voice
/ref>


Notable graves

Several of Fremont’s notable founding pioneers are buried in the cemetery, many of whom have streets named after them. Among these are the Decoto family; Captain Caleb Cook Scott, a native of Nova Scotia, who sailed his way around the Horn of Magellan in South America in order to eventually settle in what later became Centerville; and Herman Eggers and sheep-raiser Robert Blacow, who were the early settlers with large farms in the current Glenmoor area of Fremont. Near the front of the cemetery lie the Brier family, including the Rev. William Wallace Brier, the Presbyterian minister who founded the cemetery and was Alameda County's first superintendent of schools. He also founded more than 27 churches, many of them in the Bay Area, including Centerville Presbyterian in Fremont, which manages the cemetery. Records indicate that a total of 368 persons are buried in this historic cemetery.


Gallery

Image:Centerville-pioneer-cemetery.jpg, Centerville Pioneer Cemetery Image:CPC-blacow.jpg, Blacow family plot Image:CPC-brier.jpg, Brier tombstone memorial Image:CPC-eggers.jpg, Herman Eggers family memorial Image:CPC-jarvis.jpg, Donald Jarvis headstone


See also

*
Pioneer cemetery In the United States, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere, a pioneer cemetery is a cemetery that is the burial place for pioneers. American pioneers founded such cemeteries during territorial expansion of the United States, with founding dates spa ...


References


External links


A complete list of interments

Rootsweb.com photo site of some of the tombstones
* * {{coord, 37, 33, 35, N, 122, 00, 30, W, type:landmark_region:US-CA, display=title Cemeteries in Alameda County, California
Presbyterian Presbyterianism is a part of the Reformed tradition within Protestantism that broke from the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland by John Knox, who was a priest at St. Giles Cathedral (Church of Scotland). Presbyterian churches derive their nam ...
Protestant Reformed cemeteries Buildings and structures in Fremont, California 1855 establishments in California Cemeteries established in the 1850s