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For me it is All About Being of Service & Living the Life of the Give-Away....

Being Mindful of those who are unable to speak for themselves; our Non-Two Legged Relations and the Future Generations.

It's about walking on the Canka Luta Waste Behind the Cannunpa and the ceremonies.

It's about Mindfulness and Respect. It's about Honesty and owning up to my foibles.

It's about: Mi Takuye Oyacin

Monday, June 1, 2009

No Respect for the Dead: January 28, 2009

No Respect for the Dead magnify
Dogs enjoy their freedom at Cemetery Memorial Park, which riles some Ventura residents, especially those with ancestors among the 3,000 dead still buried there. In the mid-1960s, the city removed all of the grave markers and transformed the space into a park. It has since installed a few new grave markers at families' request.
Residents clash over returning a park to its past life as a cemetery.
By Catherine Saillant
January 26, 2009
On a recent rainy day, dozens of dogs ran, jumped and occasionally relieved themselves on the grassy expanse of Cemetery Memorial Park, one of downtown Ventura's most scenic vistas.

It's a common sort of scene in any city, except that in this seaside town the seven-acre knoll is the final resting place of more than 3,000 of the city's most influential pioneers.

Descendants of the people who ran its newspapers, planned its highways and built its civic institutions are not at all pleased that dogs have free reign over what they see as sacred ground.

William Dewey Hobson, the "father of Ventura County," who lobbied hard to see the area become its own county in 1873, is buried there. So is Brig. Gen. William Vandever, who commanded troops in the Civil War and was a two-term congressman. The city's first lawyers, doctors, teachers and civic leaders are all buried there.

In the mid-1960s, city leaders unceremoniously removed all of the grave markers and transformed the cemetery into a city park.

That was a terrible mistake, descendants say, and they believe it's past time to make amends.

"Every city has a cowboy cemetery," said Steve Schleder, one of the most vocal supporters of returning the park to a fenced-off cemetery, complete with headstones. "But in Ventura, they pulled off all the gravestones, threw them away and turned it into a park. How did they get away with that?"

City officials say the 45-year-old decision to transform the cemetery was done legally and that it would be impractical to return it to its former status. Dozens of people use the park every day to exercise their pets or just sit quietly and enjoy a picnic lunch.

Many of the grave markers have gone missing, and the city destroyed others. And officials aren't even sure where, exactly, each coffin lies below the surface of the seven-acre park.

"It's maintained as a park, and we currently treat it as if it's a city park," said Bill Fulton, a deputy mayor and planning expert. "But we have to find ways to acknowledge that it is also a cemetery."

The city's Parks and Recreation Commission is recommending a $4-million improvement plan that attempts to bridge the divide between purists on both sides of the debate. That vision, which goes before the City Council next month, calls for a memorial to honor those buried in the cemetery, as well as for refurbished landscaping and a veterans memorial walk.

Schleder has no ancestors buried in the park and moved to Ventura only seven years ago. But the city's actions deeply offend him. "A man's grave is something that should be respected. It's holy ground," he said. "And when they turned it into a dog toilet -- that really gets under my skin."

Schleder is one of a growing number -- including dozens whose ancestors lie beneath the grounds -- who say the city's plan does not go far enough. People buried there paid for their plots, and nothing short of complete restoration of the cemetery would right the decades-old wrong done to them, said Schleder, who operates a website, www.restorestmarys.org "> www.restorestmarys.org , dedicated to his cause.

"This is a cemetery," he said, "and it can only be a cemetery unless the city exhumes the 3,000 graves and moves them somewhere else."

City leaders say the laws on converting cemeteries is murky and that the history surrounding the city's acquisition of the land and its subsequent conversion to a park are even murkier.

It opened as St. Mary's Cemetery in 1862 when friars at San Buenaventura Mission were looking for more spacious burial grounds. For years, it was owned and operated by the Catholic Church.

By 1943, the cemetery was nearly full and had fallen into disrepair. Weeds overtook family plots that once had been carefully tended, and vandals carried off old grave markers.

The city banned any more burials there in 1944. By then, the city had assumed control of portions of the cemetery reserved for Presbyterians, Jews and Chinese, and a decade later the city bought 1.12 acres to build a recreation center.

Years of talk about turning the burial ground into a park took shape in 1963, when the city began removing headstones and crypts without any apparent controversy. The hefty markers were stored in a city-owned canyon north of Ventura, and relatives were sent letters requesting that they claim them.

Unclaimed markers stayed in Hall Canyon for seven years. In 1972, about 500 that remained were hauled to Olivas Park Golf Course, where they were broken up and used as rubble for a levee.


There were occasional reports of errant tombstones found in creeks and canyons downstream of the city yard.

The oddest came in 1993, when a smooth granite stone bearing the name of "Mother Ida May Shively" emerged from the rocky shore off Surfers Point in Ventura. Shively was buried at St. Mary's in 1901, a week after giving birth to a daughter. The heavy stone was retrieved by that daughter, then 91.

Fulton, the deputy mayor, called the city's past actions "shameful." He said it was folly to think the park could be fully restored as a cemetery but acknowledged that residents who have grown used to running their pets there must accept that it can't be a dog park, either.

Fulton believes the city should place small, flat grave markers at each burial site, a position the Parks and Recreation Commission did not recommend. Already, at least 50 small markers have been placed at grave sites by the city at the request of families.

But Fulton believes there should be a marker for every person buried there. A survey to locate each grave would have to be completed, working with records that are inconsistent.

"It's counted on our maps as a park," he said. "But those bodies are still there."

Robin Blanchard counts dozens of ancestors at the cemetery, including the "40 Cousins," a loose connection of civic activists interrelated by marriage.

"It makes me angry more than anything," said Blanchard as she watched dogs romping. "I used to push my grandfather here in a wheelchair, picking flowers along the way. We'd put them on the graves of our family members. Now, there are dogs off leash running all over them."

As Blanchard looked for markers, a pit bull puppy ran headlong into her, leaving a bruise on her leg.

"You see what I mean?" she said. "This shouldn't be happening."

But residents who use the park every day are just as adamant.

"It would be really hard to recover what they lost," said Greg Sherman, a software project manager who brings his chocolate Labrador, Nickie, every day. "We all like the idea of building a memorial. But we want to keep it open as a park."

catherine.saillant@

latimes.com

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