The Weekly Vista

Odd Fellows Cemetery contains many stories

- DEVIN HOUSTON Devin Houston is the president/CEO of Houston Enzymes. Send comments or questions to devin.houston@gmail.com. Opinions expressed are those of the author.

Cemeteries contain many stories. Each grave holds a

lifetime of experience­s left to the memories of family and friends and then usually fades from existence. A gravestone reveals only the basics of that life: dates of birth and death, perhaps

references to parents or children, perhaps a phrase

attesting to the deceased’s impression on others. Odd Fellows Cemetery,

formerly known as I.O.O.F. Cemetery, in Neosho, Mo., is a large sprawling plot of more than 8,000 graves. The first interment was in 1846

while a private cemetery. The Internatio­nal Order of Odd Fellows took over its management in 1855. Recently, the city of Neosho

acquired all rights to the cemetery. While scrolling through

archived clippings from a Neosho newspaper, I ran across the story of a woman, Maggie Wright Morgan,

who committed suicide by jumping from an upper story of the Conner Hotel in Joplin in October of 1930. She had been distraught

over the death of her husband, Dr. David Benjamin Morgan, some two weeks

earlier.

Mrs. Morgan’s husband was a well-known veterinari­an and expert on the

care Carmarthen­shire, of horses. Wales, Born he in had crossed the Atlantic some 17 times to study and practice his craft. He lived briefly in Fayettevil­le, lecturing and teaching classes in veterinary diseases. In 1905 he moved to Neosho to set up a permanent practice in a building on West Spring Street. He met a local girl, Margaret Wright, and married her in 1914. They were very community philanthro­pic and were to well- the known throughout Southweste­rn Missouri for their support of social causes. They were instrument­al in public enterprise­s and in building the community. Dr. Morgan held various public positions and was president of the Newton-McDonald County Harvest Show Associatio­n for many years. Once the automobile became popular, Dr. Morgan became more involved in care of livestock and domestic animals. On the night of Sept. 28, 1930, Mrs.

Morgan accompanie­d her husband on a call to a sick animal. On the way home,

Dr. Morgan complained of not feeling well, and a physician was summoned once they arrived home. Despite all attempts to save him, Dr.

Morgan died from a heart attack.

His funeral was attended by hundreds, and the community expressed their sorrow to his widow. Mrs. Mor

gan remarked that, upon her death, she wanted the same service, casket and pallbearer­s as her husband. Over the next few days, she

told friends that she would be going to Kansas City to arrange her husband’s business affairs, and then go to San Francisco to stay

with her sister-in-law for a time. She actually traveled to Joplin and checked in to the Conner Hotel, where she

and her husband had once spent an enjoyable time together. Mrs. Morgan left a note dictating the distributi­on of her real estate holdings, which were substantia­l. She then slashed her wrists

and throat prior to jumping out the window to the street, some 90 feet below.

Her wishes as to her funeral arrangemen­ts were carried out, and she was entombed

next to her husband in the cemetery. She was 55 at the time of her death. Yes, many stories lay in

the ground of a cemetery. This one was a little sadder than most.

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