Annapolis Valley Register

An unfortunat­e re-occurance

Twenty-one headstones also toppled 20 years ago at Wolfville cemetery

- WWW.KINGSCOUNT­YNEWS.CA

This is not the first time 21 gravestone­s have been knocked over in Wolfville.

An identical number of gravestone­s were toppled 20 years ago in a parallel incident, where the stones were also nearly all in a row.

Wendy Elliott photograph­ed and reported this incident on June 10, 1997, and spoke to the cemetery’s then manager, Herb Morine, who felt just as lost as current manager Chris Fuller does now when wrestling with why someone would do this.

“I worked at that cemetery for 60 years – it’s a random thing, and I still don’t know what you can do to stop it,” said Morine.

The details of the original photo

Elliott received a call from Morine after the 21 stones were knocked over and went to investigat­e the cemetery with her nineyear-old son in tow.

She and her son were both baffled by what they saw, and talked about it.

He asked her why anyone would ever do it such a thing. It was a hard question to answer, since she was asking herself the same thing.

“As a parent, you cannot rationaliz­e that behaviour to a child,” said Elliott.

“There’s just no making sense of it.”

After the photo was published with a short writeup, the community was shocked.

Like many in Wolfville, Elliott has a personal connection to the cemetery – her grandparen­ts are both buried there.

She said she and others felt disgusted at the actions of those who’d tipped the stones over, and that they were never caught.

And recently, when working with the community on the Mona Parsons statue design, worries it could be vandalized were voiced.

“We were worried it might happen to her as well. It’s in your mind, because vandalism happens often here,” she said.

‘A problem that might never go away’

The 1997 incident involving 21 headstones was not the only significan­t vandalism that happened during Morine’s 60 years as cemetery manager.

One incident saw 17 stones pushed over one night, followed by 20 the next.

The person or persons who pushed over the first 21 were never found.

People were questioned and found responsibl­e for the second 37, but Morine said no penalties were ever dolled out, other than basic maintenanc­e work at a local nursing home.

“We wanted them to work with people, to learn from what they’d done and how it could make people feel,” he said.

Nearly every other vandalism case went unsolved while Morine worked at the cemetery.

He remains doubtful this is the end of the cemetery’s toppling troubles.

He even looked into insuring the headstones, but found the cost very high, and not affordable with the cemetery’s limited funds.

After the stones were knocked over last time, Morine worked with community volunteers and was able to get the stones standing again.

He sees the work Chris Fuller is doing, and feels proud to have passed the torch to someone dedicated to finding a solution.

“You look after it the same as if it were own. Those people who did this don’t have any feelings whatsoever, as far as I’m concerned,” he said.

 ?? SARA ERICSSON ?? The latest case of vandalism at the Wolfville cemetery. Twenty-one headstones have been knocked over again.
SARA ERICSSON The latest case of vandalism at the Wolfville cemetery. Twenty-one headstones have been knocked over again.
 ?? SUBMITTED BY WENDY ELLIOTT ?? Wendy Elliott captured this image 20 years ago on June 10, 1997, when 21 headstones were also toppled at Wolfville’s Willowbank Cemetery.
SUBMITTED BY WENDY ELLIOTT Wendy Elliott captured this image 20 years ago on June 10, 1997, when 21 headstones were also toppled at Wolfville’s Willowbank Cemetery.

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