It is an odd benefit, but as a walker it is a lovely benefit. Several years ago a rehabilitation project with dedication plaques appeared on my route. The newly dedicated “Potter’s Field” was beautiful. I’m not revealing the location, as privacy and quiet is to be preserved. I can say when the cemetery first opened, Lot 22, aka Potter's Field, was part of the original cemetery plot. The first burial was a cigar maker named Jeremiah Smith. He was originally buried in Potter's Field, on September 17, 1873. Smith drowned when a ship sank in Lake Michigan off the shores on September 15, 1873. His remains were later moved and currently rest in Block 28. When the relocation of the cemetery began, the city council offered reduced rate lots for "all those bodies removed and reburied by relatives and friends" to incentivize civilians to move loved ones themselves to the new cemetery. In just twelve years, Potter's Field was full. Nevertheless, burials of the unidentified and poor continued in…
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