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File #: 070706    Version: 0 Name:
Type: Resolution Status: ADOPTED
File created: 9/20/2007 In control: CITY COUNCIL
On agenda: Final action: 9/20/2007
Title: Recognizing Eden Cemetery, America's oldest African American public cemetery company, located in Collingdale, Pennsylvania.
Sponsors: Councilmember Kenney, Councilmember Kenney, Councilmember Goode, Councilmember Goode, Councilmember Savage, Councilmember Greenlee, Councilmember Clarke, Councilmember Reynolds Brown, Councilmember Reynolds Brown, Councilmember DiCicco, Councilmember DiCicco, Councilmember Rizzo, Councilmember Rizzo, Councilmember Tasco, Councilmember Tasco, Councilmember Campbell, Councilmember Campbell, Councilmember O'Neill, Councilmember O'Neill
Attachments: 1. Resolution No. 07070600.pdf
Title
Recognizing Eden Cemetery, America's oldest African American public cemetery company, located in Collingdale, Pennsylvania.
Body
WHEREAS, Eden Cemetery was founded in 1902 on a fifty-three acre plot selected because of its proximity to Philadelphia, beautiful landscape, size and availability; and

WHEREAS, Establishing a unified African American cemetery was the vision of Jerome Bacon, a teacher at the Institute for Colored Youth on Bainbridge Street near Ninth Street in Philadelphia; and

WHEREAS, Bacon founded the cemetery with J.C. Asbury, Daniel W. Parvis, Martin Lehmann and Charles Jones to provide a place for remains from condemned cemeteries in Philadelphia and to also provide a future resting place for African Americans; and

WHEREAS, The first person buried in Eden was Celestine Cromwell, wife of Willis Cromwell, an advisory member to the cemetery. The burial took place August 12, 1902 after dark to protect the ceremony from white residents who, the day before, had protested the interment of African Americans in their community; and

WHEREAS, Having learned that Lebanon Cemetery, located on Passyunk Avenue near Ninth Street in Philadelphia, had been condemned, Bacon and Eden's board members worked with the cemetery's president to re-inter all remains in Eden; and

WHEREAS, In the spring of 1903, the remains from the Stephen Smith Home Cemetery, located at Forty-sixth Street and Merion were interred in Eden. And, in 1923, the remains from Olive Cemetery, which was adjacent to the Stephen Smith Home, were also buried in Eden Cemetery; and

WHEREAS, Today, there are over 80,000 interred in Eden Cemetery in 23 sections whose names honor various civil rights leaders and the deceased from cemeteries moved to Eden; and

WHEREAS, Eden Cemetery is on the Historical Register and is the resting place of hundreds of prominent national and local Philadelphian African Americans including: Amos Scott, First Magistrate for Philadelphia; Chris J...

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