Arab Times

Floods make resting places not so ‘final’

Warming effects

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WEYBRIDGE, Vt, Feb 16, (AP): When Revolution­ary War soldier Josiah Clark was buried in a small Vermont cemetery near a river bank in 1835, it was supposed to be his final resting place.

But erosion over the years made worse by more intense storms has washed away some graves and left the remains of Clark, who fought at the 1775 Battle of Bunker Hill in Massachuse­tts, precarious­ly perched on the edge of the steep eroding bank. His bones were exhumed last spring, and now the town is trying to figure out what to do about the eroding cemetery, where another Revolution­ary War soldier is also buried.

“That’s a big part of our history, and I think it’s terrible that ... this is happening,” said Tom Giffin, president of the Vermont Old Cemetery Associatio­n.

Rising seas, erosion and flooding from worsening storms that scientists believe are caused by climate change are putting some older graveyards across the country at risk. From western Alaska to Louisiana to the eastern shores of Maryland, some historical burial grounds are sinking or submerged in swamps. And the problems are not just in coastal areas.

“There’s no question but that archaeolog­ical and historic resources are threatened and arguably increasing­ly threatened with climate change effects,” including burial grounds, said David Anderson, a professor of anthropolo­gy at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.

On an island off New York City, authoritie­s in 2018 found 174 bones unearthed on a site that holds the remains of more than 1 million people. The culprit was shoreline erosion.

Anderson

Claimed

Hart Island has served as a potter’s field for New York City for nearly 150 years. People who couldn’t afford a funeral or whose bodies were not claimed when they died are buried in mass graves there. But part of the graveyard on a shoreline is gradually washing away.

“It’s sad enough to know that a million people are buried there,” said Carol DiMedio, of West Chester, Pennsylvan­ia, who discovered in 2017 that her grandfathe­r was buried on Hart Island in the 1930s. “It’s sad enough to know that a lot of loved ones have no idea where the person is buried. And then the indignity of that, of bones washing away.”

Every time there’s a storm, she worries about Hart Island, she said.

Preliminar­y work has started to stabilize and reinforce the seawall that protects the island in various spots, particular­ly the north shore, which has seen the most erosion and was further damaged by Superstorm Sandy and subsequent storms, said Jason Kersten, a spokesman for the New York City Correction Department, which operates Hart Island.

Much of the project is funded by $13.2 million from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Once the restoratio­n is complete, the remains will be re-interred, he said. The Department of Parks and Recreation is in the process of taking over the island.

On the Eastern Shore of Maryland, the rising waters are threatenin­g historic cemeteries, including a family burial ground on Robinson Neck Preserve in Dorchester County.

“Maryland’s Eastern Shore is experienci­ng sealevel rise at an accelerate­d rate due to land subsidence and other factors, and many of its other historical cemeteries are already experienci­ng flooding or turning into marshland,” said Joe Fehrer, a project manager for the The Nature Conservanc­y who is documentin­g the Robinson Neck site for the Maryland Historic Trust.

Affected

Preserving all the affected graveyards will likely be impossible, he said.

Another Vermont cemetery also has been hit hard. Tropical Storm Irene in 2011 swept dozens of sets of remains from a mountain cemetery down a raging stream in the town of Rochester. Some of the 50 sets of remains from the Woodlawn Cemetery were left intact in caskets ripped lose by floodwater­s, while others were dispersed around the cemetery or down the stream. Six weeks later about half of the remains had been recovered.

“They will be finding remains in that river for 100 years,” Giffin said.

Off of a dirt road in Weybridge, Vermont, where Clark, the Revolution­ary War soldier was laid to rest, some of the other 20 or so sets of remains in the graveyard have been lost in the soil and stream.

“You’re talking about a whole cemetery being eroded over the bank,” Giffin said. “I’ve never seen one as bad as this one, ever.”

For now the cemetery’s future remains uncertain. A woman who lives part time in the historic stone home adjacent to the cemetery had offered land onto which the graveyard could be moved. Before taking on the cemetery, Select-board chairman Don Mason said he thinks the dirt road leading to it that was damaged in a storm needs to be repaired first.

Clark’s remains are being held by the town in a box. He and his wife’s headstones have been moved away from the bank.

Like so many aging graveyards, the costly repairs are often the responsibi­lity of the towns or cemetery associatio­ns, which may lack the funds to protect these sites.

“When you go to town meeting and you ask do you put money to an old cemetery, (or do) you buy new text books, it’s kind of a no-brainer for the town,” said Giffin. “But this was a big piece of not only Vermont history but United States history.”

Meanwhile, a Florida city shut down a section of a lake after receiving reports of swarming snakes. Turns out, the slithery creatures were just celebratin­g Valentine’s Day a little early.

The Lakeland Parks & Recreation department wrote on its Facebook page that a group of non-venomous water snakes congregate­d to mate near a traffic roundabout. It included one photo of the lake shoreline, and a closeup shot of a brown snake nestled in leaves.

Officials said the snakes are “generally not aggressive as long as people do not disturb them.”

The city said that Florida water snakes are a native species.

“They are generally found resting in tree limbs over water or basking on shorelines. They are an important part of the ecosystem and should not be disturbed,” the Facebook post said.

Lakeland is in central Florida, between Tampa and Orlando.

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