One more time at midnight, near the wall
I took a little field trip out of town this weekend, and managed to spend yesterday afternoon visiting a couple of creepy/morbid spots because I’m weird like that.
Naturally I had to make a stop at Waverly Hills again. I didn’t hear any creepy noises this time (though I never would have over the icy, whipping wind), and the photos I got are nearly the same as my previous ones, but it was cool nonetheless. The photos from yesterday are here.
I also visited a spot that I didn’t know about when I was in town in November (though it shares a brick wall with Cave Hill Cemetery) – Eastern Cemetery.
Eastern Cemetery in Louisville, Kentucky, has been abandoned since the late 1980s when it was learned that graves had been reused (sometimes numerous times) since as early as the 1920s.
In 2005 it was discovered that a crypt in the middle of the cemetery stood unlocked with boxes upon boxes of “cremains,” some of which were labeled with multiple names or simply as “unknown.” Some of the boxes remained (though I don’t know if they were empty or not) when I visited yesterday, but the crypt was locked.
All possible points of entry to the old crematory/office/columbarium facility had been sealed up with cinderblocks, though I’m thinking that may have been recent, as I’ve found pictures on the internet taken inside the building as recently as July 2008.
One of the smokestacks from the two crematory furnaces still stands, but the other was reduced some rusty pieces of Swiss cheese on the ground. Since I couldn’t get into the basement of the building to check out the furnaces, these were the next best thing.
Though cemeteries don’t really give me the creeps (I reserve that for abandoned buildings), I was convinced from all that I’d read that Eastern Cemetery was going to give me goosebumps – so much so that I had a scary dream about going there a few weeks before I actually went. However, I went away just feeling sad.
If a person paid for a burial place and a headstone or plaque, it seems that they may have wanted to be remembered. Sadly, everything about that burial ground seemed lonely and forgotten.
Click below to go to the set of photos I took at Eastern Cemetery – I’ve captioned them in case that’s of some interest.
More on Eastern Cemetery:
Thousands Buried in Old Graves, Investigators in Kentucky Report [New York Times, 1989]
Some graves contained the remains of as many as six people, and graves containing the remains of three or four are common…
Unlocked Crypt Latest In Line Of Local Cemetery Problems [WLKY, 2005 - transcript/video]
[W]e find a crypt on the middle of the property, not locked, containing what appears to be the cremated remains of dozens of people. Some of the remains are numbered or labeled ‘unknown.’ Some containers list the names of several people.
Disgraced Cemeteries [WLKY, 2005 - transcript/video]
The investigation also details finding scores of babies buried only a foot deep, and finding bones everywhere from a toolbox to a White Castle bag, forcing authorities to shut down the cemeteries.








That’s gross! I like the crematorium photos.
valerie
January 20, 2009 at 2:11 am