The Columbus Dispatch

Firefighte­r gets headstone 150 years later

- George Shillcock

A century and a half ago, Mark Newman became the first Columbus firefighte­r to die in the line of duty. On Tuesday, the Columbus Division of Fire and his descendant­s gathered to honor him with a ceremony and the unveiling of a headstone.

On Aug. 4, 1870, Newman died while fighting a fire at the Columbus Woolen Mills Factory when a wall collapsed onto him. Newman, who was also a police officer, was buried with honors from both department­s but was left in an unmarked grave in Green Lawn Cemetery.

When Columbus firefighte­r Chris Klein learned that in 2013, he set out to change it.

“His name has been on our rolls for a long time,” Newman said. “I have so many of these little mysteries I’m unraveling, but this has been the biggest and the longest one.”

With the help of fellow firefighte­r Steve Cox, a Gofundme account was set up and raised over $6,000.

Klein said he discovered the grave by using the maps that the cemetery has on file. He was unable to spot it until he noticed a little red heart marking the spot.

Alongside Newman’s unmarked grave were headstones that had obvious signs of recent visitation­s, such as flowers.

Through research with the cemetery and Ancestry.com, Klein and Cox were able to find living descendant­s of Newman’s and they began communicat­ing with them about the gravesite efforts and their goal of raising enough money to dedicate a headstone for Newman on the 150th anniversar­y of his death.

Mary Harper, who is Newman’s great-great-niece, attended with Chris

Watts and Patty Perrigo, who are Newman’s great-great-great-nieces. For 50 years, Watts and Perrigo have visited the gravestone­s of their grandparen­ts directly in front of Newman’s grave.

“We felt really honored and just very happy that they took the time to do this,” Watts said.

A little over a dozen of Newman’s other descendant­s and their relatives joined Columbus firefighte­rs, cemetery employees and others for Tuesday’s ceremony, which included a traditiona­l bell ceremony and “Amazing Grace” played on bagpipes by Capt. Aaron Shonkwiler.

Firefighte­r Doug Wortman said they were able to identify 12 other firefighte­rs who died in the line of duty and are buried in Green Lawn, but Newman was the only one without a headstone. Wortman has helped add plaques and flags to the graves of all of them.

“I appreciate the history as well as (Klein) does,” Wortman said. “He told me about this and I said, ‘Well, we gotta do something.’”

Randy Rogers, president of the Green Lawn Cemetery Associatio­n, said Newman’s family couldn’t afford a gravestone, only a burial. Newman, who was born in 1825, left behind a wife, Susan (1830-1882), and two small children, Grace (died 1876) and Jennie (died 1936).

In addition to being a volunteer firefighte­r for Station 3 and a police officer, Newman was a manager at a local warehouse and was one of the first firefighte­rs to use a steam pumper fire engine in place of hand pumps and buckets. Such a pump is depicted on the back of his headstone. gshillcock@dispatch.com @Shillcockg­eorge

 ?? [KYLE ROBERTSON/DISPATCH] ?? Steve Cox unveils the headstone obtained for fellow Columbus firefighte­r Mark B. Newman during a ceremony at Green Lawn Cemetery on Tuesday, the 150th anniversar­y of his on-duty death. Research located his unmarked grave, and a fundraisin­g effort paid for the headstone.
[KYLE ROBERTSON/DISPATCH] Steve Cox unveils the headstone obtained for fellow Columbus firefighte­r Mark B. Newman during a ceremony at Green Lawn Cemetery on Tuesday, the 150th anniversar­y of his on-duty death. Research located his unmarked grave, and a fundraisin­g effort paid for the headstone.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States