Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Lutherans reviving cemetery in Hill

- Diana Nelson Jones: djones@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1626.

graves are inscribed in Arabic, Slovak and Greek. But most of the markers not written in English are in German.

The cemetery was establishe­d in 1852 by the Second St. Paul Lutheran Church on Pride Street, Uptown — now home of Shepherd’s Heart, a shelter for people without homes. The church closed in 1981.

The seven pastoral acres that hold the remains of former congregant­s, among others, spread over a slope bordered by Shawnee and Vancroft streets, behind Pittsburgh Milliones 6-12, also known as University Prep. The cemetery has a view of Downtown.

Vandals destroyed headstones in 1967. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette headline read: “Hoodlums Desecrate Graveyard.”

After that, a few dozen people were buried in Minersvill­e, then it lay forgotten and overgrown until congregant­s from local Lutheran churches rediscover­ed it five years ago. They cleared it of weeds, litter and piles of debris that had been dumped there.

A $7,300 grant from the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod and $2,400 in local donations helped establish a maintenanc­e fund.

A before-and-after video on YouTube reveals gravestone­s that had been hidden under waist-high overgrowth. Some that were toppled and displaced have been laid along a cemetery path.

Debra Terhune, a retired teacher who wrote for grants to pay for an entrance gate, road markers and path repairs, also produced the video. It describes the “CPR Project” — for care, preservati­on and restoratio­n. Volunteers created it as a strategic plan, said the Rev. Douglas Spittel, a board member of the Pittsburgh Area Lutheran Ministries, orPALM.

The plan reads like a wish list waiting for funding, which depends mostly on the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, into whose ownership the cemetery reverted in 1982.

Deaconess Cheryl Naumann; her son, the Rev. Edward Naumann; and Ms. Terhune made up the first cemetery committee.

Asthe group raises money, itmoves through its wish list. Sofar, a maintenanc­e scheduleha­s kept the lawn dignified andrighted many fallen tombstones.Some markers remain leaning.

Ms. Terhune said the disarray has been caused by roots of dying trees. The plan slates these trees for removal. The group paid to get a sonogram with ground penetratin­g radar to determine who is where, because part of the project is to create a book and a map so people can come in and find their loved one.

“Everyone working on this is a volunteer with day jobs, so it’s a slow process,” she said.

OneMinersv­ille plot holds theremains of the Rev. WilliamPas­savant. He bought an entiresect­ion for paupers’ graves.He founded the Pittsburgh­Infirmary on the North Sidein 1849. Its current iteration,Passavant Hospital, openedin McCandless in 1964.

One body in Minersvill­e belonged to a Major League Baseball pitcher, Frank “Piano Mover” Smith.

“He threw a couple of nohitters for the [Chicago] White Sox in the early 1900s, one against my Detroit Tigers,” said the Rev. Brian Westgate, pastor at Redeemer Lutheran in Oakmont and current chair of the cemetery committee.

Because Mr. Smith tended to be wild — on the mound and off — White Sox management sent him packing in 1908 but welcomed him back the next season. His drinking got him shuttled to one team after another before he retired in 1915. He returned to Pittsburgh and his old career in the moving business. He died in 1952 at age 73.

Rev. Westgate said the attention paid by volunteers in recent years has reactivate­d the cemetery.

“WhenDenzel Washington­was filming August Wilson’s‘Fences,’ they filmed a scenein Minersvill­e,” he said.“A student group was recentlyup there, the Studentsfo­r Sustainabi­lity from Pitt.They planted flowers.”

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