Today I invite you to head over to my other blog to read a history tidbit about another Chuckery area cemetery. Many Chuckery residents have found a final resting place at the Union Township Cemetery. Check it out!
Friday, May 31, 2013
The Union Township Cemetery at Milford Center, Ohio
Today I invite you to head over to my other blog to read a history tidbit about another Chuckery area cemetery. Many Chuckery residents have found a final resting place at the Union Township Cemetery. Check it out!
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Guy Cemetery
Guy Cemetery is another graveyard that dates pioneer times in the Chuckery area. It is located on the east side of Guy Cemetery Road. It is on land that was donated to Pike Township by William and Adelaide Guy upon the death of their son, Lewis F. in 1843. This land is still well maintained and used as a cemetery today.
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Phellis Cemetery Update
It has been a year since I first discovered the Phellis Cemetery on Rosedale Road near Chuckery. And, in that year I still do not know much about this cemetery. Find-A-Grave has thirteen listings for interments in this cemetery, but there are no pictures. A friend of mine said he thought that gravestones might have been destroyed by a tenant farmer in recent years. Whatever the story, I would love to visit this tiny cemetery. I hope that someone reads this post and decides to pay this cemetery a visit.
Monday, May 27, 2013
The Bigelow Cemetery - An Ohio State Nature Preserve
The Bigelow Cemetery (A repeat of an oldie but goodie!)
The Bigelow Cemetery is a pioneer cemetery containing many of the remains of the Bigelow family and their neighbors. This cemetery is alternately known as both the Chuckery Cemetery and the Boerger Cemetery. This is due to its location near land presently owned by the Boerger Family and the Chuckery community.
In pioneer days, native vegetation was cleared from the Darby Plains by setting fire to the prairie each spring. Then the land would be prepared for planting. Largely, the land was not heavily tilled. It is here on the Darby Plains that people came from the New England states to settle. These pioneers included the Bigelow family, the Reed family, the Mc Cloud family, and the Smith family. In old histories, scarcely a family was left untouched by the plague and malaria in the early 1800s.
In 1978, the Ohio Department of Natural Resources named the Bigelow Cemetery a state nature preserve. This was due to the fact that it had never been tilled, and it is considered to be a remnant of the vast Darby Plains. This site is owned by the Pike Township trustees, while being managed by ODNR.
For me, this is another one of those spots that I get lost, I get lost in yesteryear as I read the tombstones. My heart breaks as I read of young children who died very young. And, my heart rejoices as I read of those pioneers who have lived to ripe old ages. And, sometimes, if I close my eyes, I can smell the light fragrance of the prairie flowers, I can see a wagon on the road. I can hear the clip-clop of the horse hooves, and for a moment I am truly living a life on the Chuckery Prairie.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Mitchell (Robinson) Cemetery in Darby Township, Union County, Ohio
Today I invite you to head over to my other blog to read a history tidbit about another Chuckery area cemetery. Check out Mitchell Cemetery!
Saturday, May 25, 2013
The St. Paul Lutheran Cemetery
![]() |
Friday, May 24, 2013
Chuckery Area Cemeteries
As a genealogist, I have always been fascinated by cemeteries. I like to stroll among the graves, reading names and dates while I imagine how these people might have lived their lives. I also have a fascination of history, especially the local histories of Union and Madison Counties in Ohio. In many cases, I know the stories behind the people. . . But, it is still something that I ponder.
Since Memorial Day is a traditional time for people to visit cemeteries, I have decided to take my readers on a virtual tour of the cemeteries near Chuckery. As we stroll through yesteryear, please let me know if there is specific information that you would like to know about each cemetery. And, if you would like specific pictures taken, I am more than willing to help you out.
Thank you for visiting!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)

