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Missoula Cemetery is the second oldest cemetery located in
Missoula, Montana Missoula ( ; fla, label=Salish language, Séliš, Nłʔay, lit=Place of the Small Bull Trout, script=Latn; kut, Tuhuⱡnana, script=Latn) is a city in the U.S. state of Montana; it is the county seat of Missoula County, Montana, Missoula Cou ...
, with Fort Missoula Cemetery being the oldest. The Missoula Cemetery was first established in 1884 by the Missoula Valley Improvement Company, a corporation owned by prominent citizens Isadore Cohn, Frank Woody, William H.H. Dickinson and Thomas C Marshall. The land where the cemetery would be built was purchased from the Northern Pacific Railroad for $168. The cemetery was eventually sold to the City of Missoula in 1901, for the total of $1.


History

The Missoula Cemetery was created in 1884 to house those who had succumbed to the harsh life of a small mill town. The cemetery initially had very wide-set roads for easy access by wagon. Eventually, the waning use of wagons made the wide roads obsolete and the cemetery had to be renovated. The roads through the cemetery have since been narrowed to allow for more plots. The Missoula Cemetery has many of the town's original founders buried there. C. P. Higgins and his family, who once had their graves at the base of Whitaker Hill on the southern side of Missoula, now have their bodies buried in the Missoula Cemetery.


Location and expansion

The Missoula Cemetery began as a small plot of land purchased out of necessity. The lack of modern medicine, prominence of disease, paired with the dangerous habits of the late 19th-century West made life expectancy low and dictated the need for a cemetery. The original founders, the Missoula Valley Improvement Company, owned the cemetery for many years, only relinquishing it to the City of Missoula in 1901. Upon purchasing the land, the City Council appointed the first Board of Trustees to manage the maintenance of the cemetery. It consisted of Samuel Bellew, Harriet Keith, E. A. Winstanley, Mrs. F. H. Woody, Lizzie Mills and Lucinda Worden. The current trustees are Marjorie Jacobs, Sharee Fraser, Carol Gorden, Patrick J. McHugh and Mary Lou Cordis. The Missoula Cemetery still holds the same location as when it was founded in 1884, about three miles (5 km) northwest of the city's center. The cemetery has since grown from to a total of approximately . Only of the plots are occupied by graves. The remaining 40 have been purchased by the City of Missoula for further expansion and development.


Prominent graves

Some of the more prominent locals of Missoula's past have bold elaborate tombstones to commemorate their lives, like Francis Worden's large marble tombstone. Others are made of simple marble that masks their renowned accomplishments in life, like Jeanette Rankin's black stone with a plainly marked face. Below is a short list of some of the better-known characters of Missoula's past, beginning with their name and followed by their death date. * Christopher P. Higgins – 10/14/1889 co-founder of Missoula and a member of Missoula's first Territorial Legislature. * Francis L. Worden – 2/5/1887 co-founder of Missoula and successful businessman. He soon became Higgins' political enemy. * Edward L. Bonner – 7/10/1902 A prominent businessman who collaborated with A.B. Hammond to found the Missoula Mercantile in the early 1880s. The town of Bonner, Montana, is named after him. * Daniel E. Bandmann – 11/23/1905 Actor and rancher. He gave his name to the location of Bandmann flats that lay just east of Bonner, Montana. * Thomas L. Greenough – 7/23/1911 Was a successful settler who built a mansion and forme
Greenough
Park, east of Missoula, Montana. * James H.T. Ryman – 5/31/1926 He was the head principal of public schools and served as trustee to the public library for 30 years. * Emma Dickenson – 1/1/1927 Missoula's first teacher. * A. J. Gibson – 12/31/1927 One of Missoula's first architects who began building the University of Montana campus in Missoula, starting with University Hall. * Jeanette P. Rankin – 5/8/1973 She is not actually buried in the Missoula cemetery, but it hosts a memorial to her life. She was the first woman to ever be elected to the U.S. Congress. Her legacy greatly outstands her tombstone, which simply says her name, birth and death date. *
M. Winnifred Feighner Marjory Winnifred Feighner (1887 - April 9, 1944) was Assistant Librarian at the University of Montana. Early life Marjory Winnifred Feighner was born in 1887 in Missoula, Montana, the daughter of Daniel Rolando Feighner (1847-1915), a Missoula pio ...
, Assistant librarian at University of Montana and daughter of Missoula pioneers Daniel R. Feighner and Jennie Monroe


Unmarked graves

In 1903, the Northern Pacific Railway purchased nearly 400 gravesites in Missoula's Cemetery for Japanese laborers who worked for the railway company. These sites were bought for the purpose of burying 100 bodies of those who died while working on the railroad in Plains, Montana. Most of these sites remain unmarked, with a select few bearing Japanese script across the tombstones. Japanese tombstones were typically made of standard marble and stood at about threeStott, Annette. (2008). ''Pioneer Cemeteries: Sculpture Gardens of the Old West.'' Anette Stott. pp. 22. feet off the ground. Most of the Japanese grave sites in Missoula's cemetery have no markings of this kind. This is due in part to the fact that Japanese immigrants didn't always bring their entire families over; therefore there was no one to write an epitaph for them. The Japanese workers employed by the Great Northern Railway typically made considerably less than white workers. The Japanese made 90 cents per ten-hour day, compared to Whites making $1.45. In 1864, Congress made it possible for the Northern Pacific Railway to purchase and advance production on nearly 14 million acres of land between
Minnesota Minnesota () is a state in the upper midwestern region of the United States. It is the 12th largest U.S. state in area and the 22nd most populous, with over 5.75 million residents. Minnesota is home to western prairies, now given over to ...
and
Oregon Oregon () is a U.S. state, state in the Pacific Northwest region of the Western United States. The Columbia River delineates much of Oregon's northern boundary with Washington (state), Washington, while the Snake River delineates much of it ...
, which is how so many Japanese ended up in the Missoula Cemetery. Missoula's own A.B. Hammond collaborated with the Northern Pacific and create wood mills, railroad ties, and other essentials for the railroad and its workers.


Books

* ''Grave Matters: a journey through the modern funeral industry to a natural way of burial'' * ''Rest In Peace: a cultural history of death and the funeral home in twentieth-century America''


See also

* List of cemeteries in Montana


References


External links


"Actors bring historical characters to life in cemetery tour," Missoulian article


* ttp://missoulian.com/news/local/article_e35ded1e-e578-11df-b328-001cc4c002e0.html "Historical figures tell their tales at 'Stories and Stones'," Missoulian article
Stott, Annette. (2008). Pioneer Cemeteries: Sculpture Gardens of the Old West. Anette Stott. pp. 22.
{{Authority control 1884 establishments in Montana Territory Cemeteries in Montana History of Missoula, Montana Buildings and structures in Missoula, Montana Protected areas of Missoula County, Montana Tourist attractions in Missoula, Montana