East Lake Cemetery
East Lake Cemetery, also called Ruhama Cemetery, is a two-acre cemetery located on Division Hill, along 78th Street, straddling Division Avenue, in Birmingham's East Lake neighborhood. It was established in the early 1830s, long before the establishment of "East Lake" as a streetcar suburb of Birmingham, and was associated with Ruhama Baptist Church. The first parcel was donated to the church by Richard Wood and his wife, Harriet Bradford Wood.
In 1884, Jemison Realty donated several additional lots to the cemetery before it went to a stock company, where shares were bought by several people and interests, including the Jemison Company and Ruhama Baptist Church. The shares were eventually sold in 1900 to William Williams. An East Lake Cemetery Improvement Association. That group commissioned a "wall committee" to make plans to enclose the property in 1918.
After Williams' death in 1931 the cemetery sold twice more before coming into the possession of John Lavender.
The cemetery holds the graves of at least sixty Confederate veterans and one Union soldier. The Alexander H. Stephens Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy began planning a memorial to Company C of the 20th Alabama Regiment which was raised at the campus of Howard College in Marion, Perry County. Since the college had moved to East Lake in the late 1880s, the memorial was to be located at East Lake Cemetery. By the time it was finally completed in 1951, the chapter had decided to also honor veterans of the Spanish-American War, World War I and World War II with a four-sided "Soldiers' Monument.
In April 1955 the cause of preserving and beautifying East Lake Cemetery was undertaken by a newly-formed Division Hill Memorial Garden Club. The organizers of the club included Olin Kelso, G. A. Waters, and Mrs Leon Palmer and the group planned to hold annual memorial services on Easter Sundays, to include a reading of a roll of the names of all those interred there. The first gift to the club was a crape myrtle donated by Mrs C. T. Hutchens, daughter of Mary Echols, in honor of W. H. McDaniel. The group, which continued at least through 1958 under the leadership of A. W. Hawley, compiled a history of the cemetery, including records of burials and planned to produce a map of plots.
Notable Burials
- Jacob Baker (1809-1861), first principal of Ruhama Academy
- George Bayless, first clerk of the Ruhama Baptist Church
- Magnolia Ellard (1885–1904)
- John Marvin Huey, minister
- Louiza McDaniel (1820–1891)
- W. H. McDaniel
- John McPhaul (–1928), L & N Railroad engineer
- George W. Macon (1861–1931), Howard College professor
- James Moor (1853–1904)
- Martha Jane Moor (1855–1901)
- Joseph Moor (1856–1899)
- Theodrick Moor (1841–1911)
- James Mullin (1857–1903), Birmingham Police officer killed in the line of duty
- Solomon Palmer (1839–1896), president of East Lake Atheneum
- James Russell (1851–1931), attorney
- John Shugart (1852–1906), attorney and homicide victim
- James D. Truss (1861–1925), civil engineer and politician
- William Williams (1841–1931), planing mill owner
- William Wyatt (1829–1911)
References
- "East Lake Cemetery Association Meets" (May 8, 1918) The Birmingham News, p. 10
- "Monument In Cemetery To Veterans Of 4 Wars" (n. d.) East End News - via Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections
- "Memorial Garden Club Is Formed To Perpetuate, Beautify Cemetery" (1955) unidentified newspaper - via Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections
- Palmer, Mrs Leon (1956) "Historic East Lake Cemetery Has Memorial To Early Teacher" East End News - via Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections
- Alexander, Lorine (October 12, 1958) "What's to be the fate of our old cemeteries." The Birmingham News Magazine, p. 18–19
- "East Lake Cemetery" in The Heritage of Jefferson County, Alabama (2002) Clanton: Heritage Publishing Consultants. ISBN 1891647547, p. 137