Stratford cemetery presentation coming up

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The Stratford Ecological Center will host a presentation about its 200-year-old cemetery following the findings of a geophysical survey.

Ohio Valley Archaeology Inc. conducted the surveys in August, producing a 90-page report that indicated there were 108 marked and possible unmarked graves at the 8,250-square-foot cemetery. Jarrod Burks, the professional archaeologist from OVA who handle the survey, will speak at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 8.

OVA’s findings nearly matched a map of the cemetery created in 1939 by the Works Progress Administration, a U.S. agency from the Great Depression era, and that indicated there were possibly 127 burial plots, though unclear if they were actual graves.

Volunteers of the center, 3083 Liberty Road, have led most of the research efforts of the community cemetery, which has recorded burials from 1816 to 1888. John Tetz and Liz Barker began researching the cemetery in the fall of 2013 with the support of the center’s founder, Louise Warner, and its executive director/farmer, Jeff Dickinson.

Prior to the survey, the volunteers had determined there were 59 burials at the cemetery based on five historical documents.

County commissioners awarded the center in May a $6,067 community enhancement grant for the cemetery’s ground-penetrating radar service and granite markers.

Prominent burials include Forrest Meeker, a colonel during the War of 1812; James Kooken, a captain during the Revolutionary and 1812 wars; and Peter Kroninger, a soldier from the Civil War. Meeker, who once owned the property where the cemetery was located, now has a bronze War of 1812 flag marker at his grave, issued from the federal government.

The public is welcome to visit the cemetery but visitors should check-in at the center’s education center to get directions to the site.

By Brandon Klein

[email protected]

Gazette reporter Brandon Klein can be reached by email or on Twitter at @brandoneklein.

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