Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Graves of some who died at R.I. institutio­ns lie under highway

- JENNIFER MCDERMOTT

CRANSTON, R.I. — The thousands of drivers who use a Rhode Island highway on their way to work every day probably have no idea they are passing over the graves of some people who died in the late 1800s and early 1900s at state institutio­ns.

The location of the graves beneath the highway in Cranston, R.I., was publicized in a WPRI-TV story Oct. 18 about a woman searching for the gravesite for her great-great-grandfathe­r.

Maria da Graca has been looking for his grave for more than a decade. She feared at one point he might be under the highway.

Route 37 was built between 1963 and 1969 over part of the institutio­n cemetery called State Farm Cemetery #1.

There are about 1,200 gravesites containing 3,000 people. A thousand of those graves should have been moved, said Charles St. Martin, a spokespers­on for the Rhode Island Department of Transporta­tion.

“It was during a time when regulation­s were far more lax than they are now,” he wrote in an email Tuesday. “This would never happen now.”

St. Martin said the planning was completed prior to the federal legislatio­n passed in 1966 to preserve historic and archaeolog­ical sites, so historical or environmen­tal surveys weren’t done. And there were no grave markers when the highway was built because the original grave markers were wooden stakes that had rotted away, he added.

Some of the grave markers had been destroyed by fire too.

The cemetery was near railroad tracks and sparks from the steam engines set fires that consumed the markers, according to a descriptio­n of the cemetery by the Rhode Island Historical Cemetery Commission. The cemetery deteriorat­ed and became overgrown.

In 2006, dozens of coffins were exposed due to rain, and some had to be moved when the road was repaired, the commission said.

That was when the transporta­tion department realized the graves were there, St. Martin said.

The department is not aware of any other state highways that were built over cemeteries. It does not plan to move the graves that are under Route 37.

“We are most sympatheti­c to the families of all the people who long ago were buried in unmarked graves but this is the extent of our knowledge and our records,” he wrote in the email.

No relatives of the deceased have approached the department to raise this as an issue. Most of the people who died at the state institutio­ns for poor people and those with mental illness were buried by their families elsewhere.

Da Graca’s relative, Antonio Coelho, was likely buried in institutio­n cemetery # 3 when he died in 1941. Coelho came to Rhode Island from Cape Verde to buy a packet ship in 1891. But after the captain intentiona­lly sunk the ship, Coelho spent the rest of his life in poverty and had to live at the state institutio­n.

The transporta­tion department believes his grave was probably one of 577 that were moved to cemetery #2 in 1975 to make way for an industrial complex, but da Graca told WPRI she’s not convinced he’s there and she will keep searching.

 ?? (AP/William J. Kole) ?? A vehicle passes Wednesday beneath state Route 37 in Cranston, R.I. Officials say the highway was built over up to 1,000 graves containing the remains of people who died in state institutio­ns in the late 1800s and early 1900s when it was constructe­d in the 1960s.
(AP/William J. Kole) A vehicle passes Wednesday beneath state Route 37 in Cranston, R.I. Officials say the highway was built over up to 1,000 graves containing the remains of people who died in state institutio­ns in the late 1800s and early 1900s when it was constructe­d in the 1960s.

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