Joey Reilly plants flowers before the grave stones he helped discover (Photo FOMMCI) |
On March 28, 2015, “Park Day,” the
Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery, Inc. (FOMMCI) sponsored a cleanup and restoration
event in this sprawling, formerly abandoned cemetery (you can read about the
history of Mount Moriah at the website link at the end). America’s national
“Park Day,” is sponsored by the Civil War Trust, and while it is mainly about
saving historic Civil War battlefields, it also encompasses related historic
sites. Mount Moriah Cemetery is sacred in that hundreds of Civil War soldiers
and sailors are interred here.
On March 28, 2015, “Park Day,” the Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery, Inc. sponsored a cleanup and restoration event in this sprawling, formerly abandoned cemetery (you can read about the history of Mount Moriah at the link at the end). America’s national “Park Day,” is sponsored by the Civil War Trust, and while it is mainly about saving historic Civil War battlefields, it also encompasses related historic sites. Mount Moriah Cemetery is sacred in that hundreds of Civil War soldiers and sailors are interred here.
I planned to photograph some of the events
and projects going on that day, which included tours, searching for visitors’
ancestors’ graves, and various brush-cutting and raking endeavors. Section 27
on the Philadelphia side of the cemetery was the designated area for the
latter, and scores of volunteers showed up to help clear weeds and other dead
vegetation. This was one of the last opportunities to tackle these plants, as
everything would be greening up soon. The live plants are more difficult to cut
back, the leaves and vines hide headstones, and springtime ushers back the deer
ticks and poison ivy.
Section 27 is just below the Masonic
Circle of Saint John (click link
to map, which indicates the density of overgrowth in all sections of Mount
Moriah Cemetery). Early in the day, as I was hiking up to the Circle to see
what all the chain saw noise was about (volunteers felling trees), I noticed a
young boy and his Dad pulling tools out of their car and setting up to cut
weeds near the lower end of Section 27, near the road. I interviewed them for a bit and took some
photos. Joe Reilly, Sr., said he had brought his ten-year-old son to Mount
Moriah a couple times and the youngster really enjoyed the landscaping work. As
Joe Jr., Joey, went at the weeds with clippers, I could see he was really
charged up.
Joey Reilly beginning to clear weeds from around the Brady headstone |
I knew that about thirty feet up the
hill was the grave of volunteer Civil War nurse Mary Brady (1821 – 1864), which
had been cleared last year but now had weeds growing all around it. I offered
to show the Reillys her grave and suggested that, with this being Park Day -
when we focus on Civil War-related historic sites - perhaps they would like to
clear the area around her grave. They were both enthusiastic about this so we
grabbed their tools and walked up the hill.
From the Civil War Trust website:
From the Civil War Trust website:
"Since 1996, the Civil War Trust has sponsored Park Day, an annual hands-on preservation event to help Civil War — and now Revolutionary War — battlefields and historic sites take on maintenance projects large and small. Activities are chosen by each participating site to meet their own particular needs and can range from raking leaves and hauling trash to painting signs and trail buildings."
As I showed the Reillys the Brady head stone, Joey started poking in the dirt with a small shovel exposing pieces of marble. He asked me what this was. I explained to him that over the years, grave markers and parts of monuments fall and are buried by natural soil erosion. I told him that what he was poking at might very well be a headstone of someone in Mary Brady’s family. I left them to explore as I went off to photograph other events in different sections of the grounds.
Joey Reilly examines the headstone of the Brady children |
Civil War Nurse Mary Brady's original headstone; 1990s-era replacement stone at rear (photo FOMMCI) |
At the time, I told them not to try and lift the stone themselves,
but to go get one of the Friends of Mount Moriah volunteers to work with them.
I had to leave then to go photograph the tour of the Naval Asylum plot and left
the cemetery after that. You can imagine my surprise when I saw this photo
(immediately above) on the Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery, Inc. Facebook page
the next day! The Reillys uncovered two headstones – one that marked the grave of
Edward Brady and another that marked the graves of their
children. At some point after the Reillys had gone, Ken Smith, Treasurer of the
Friends, along with other volunteers raised and secured these, along with an even more fascinating stone.
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In the words of Paulette Rhone,
President of the volunteer Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery, Inc.:
"As if the day could not get any better, it did. After the headstones
for the family of Mary Brady were unearthed, we knew that she must have one
too. Well, you know Ken [Smith] was bound and determined to find it and he did.
Civil War nurse Mary Brady's original headstone is now standing tall with the
rest of her family. Mike Comfort did the honor of placing the flag. It just
doesn't get much better than that for Civil War Park Day!"
When the 28th Pennsylvania Historical Association of the Sons of Union Veterans decided to honor Mary Brady’s memory in the 1990s by having a new grave marker carved and installed, it probably did not occur to them that the original stone lay but a few inches underground. Today, the original stands proudly before the substitute, but oddly, bearing different dates! The original shows Brady's life dates as 1821-1864, while the original shows 1822-1864. Ah, the mysteries of cemeteries ….. !
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References and Further Reading:
Read about Mary A. Brady, Volunteer Civil War Nurse
The Friends of Mount Moriah
Cemetery, Inc. Website
The Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery, Inc. Facebook Group Page
The Friends of Mount Moriah Cemetery, Inc. Facebook Group Page
Civil War Trust Park Day link