• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Over 20,000 Tombstones Were Dumped In Delaware River In The 1900s

February 10, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

If you go walking beneath the Betsy Ross Bridge along the Delaware River, you will be met by a cascade of over 20,000 gravestones. The stones have been repurposed as rip-rap, foundational material that sits at the base of a breakwater or bridge, like the Betsy Ross. But how did they come to be here, and where are the bodies?

Among the thousands of gravestones to be found beneath the surface of the Delaware River is that of artist John Sartain. He moved to the US from London as a professional line engraver, painter, and illustrator with an interest in architecture.

Advertisement

In time, his skillset would bring him to the Monument Cemetery in Philadelphia, where he designed medallions for the George Washington and Lafayette monuments erected in 1869. Almost 20 years later, he returned as a resident, being buried in Monument Cemetery shortly after his death.

monument cemetery delaware river tombstones
The Gothic gatehouse to Philadelphia’s Monument Cemetery as it was in 1868. Image credit: Monument Cemetery – Photograph, Public Domain, via Wikimedia

The land upon which the Monument Cemetery had sat was no stranger to transformation. First founded in 1837, it was created to be a calming and restful place for people to visit their dead loved ones, writes Hidden City – but as industry populated the neighborhood with factories and their associated pollution, it lost its pastoral charm. 

It endured as a cemetery for over a century, but for Sartain and the thousands of other residents, it would not be their final resting place. In 1929, Monument Cemetery was finally full. With no space left to bury the dead, it had no income, and soon even minimum upkeep fell by the wayside. 

Come 1956, it was condemned and changed hands to Temple University. They had no use for a cemetery but were after the land, wanting to clear it so it could be repurposed as a parking lot. However, that would involve moving a lot of people.

delaware river monument tombstones
The grim example of recycling has seen the gravestones repurposed as anti-erosion rip-rap. Image credit: pwbaker Flickr, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia

Several hundred families had to move their dead to be reburied alongside their grave markers at the Lawnview Cemetery in Montgomery County. However, Sartain’s remains were among over 20,000 that went unclaimed and so were exhumed and reburied in a mass grave. For those people, the tombstones did not travel with them and instead were repurposed for infrastructure.

Sartain’s gravemarker, the monuments he crafted, and the tombstones of thousands of other unclaimed dead were dropped into the Delaware River, where they can still be found to this day. Many are submerged too deep to be seen from shore, but there are some that remain visible at the river’s edge.

Not exactly what you expect to see when walking riverside, but did you hear about the shoes that kept washing up with feet in them?

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Norway coalition talks start, with climate and oil in focus
  2. Indonesian fintech Xendit is now a unicorn, with $150M in fresh funding led by Tiger Global
  3. U.S. Senator Cruz vows to block new Democratic debt ceiling ploy
  4. Yellen says U.S. may exhaust cash by Oct 18 barring debt ceiling rise

Source Link: Over 20,000 Tombstones Were Dumped In Delaware River In The 1900s

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Aliens Up To 200 Light-Years Away Could Find Earth Thanks To Our Airports
  • For The First Time, Wild Rays Have Been Filmed Telling Sharks To “Back Off!” With Electric Shocks
  • Gonorrhea Vaccines, New Antibiotics, And At-Home Testing: What’s The Latest In STI Research?
  • What NASA’s Galileo Spacecraft Saw As It Plunged Into Jupiter
  • Very Hungry “Plastivore” Caterpillars Get Fat From Eating Plastic
  • “Nobody Expected This”: Earth’s Rotation Will Speed Up Tomorrow, Bucking The Downward Trend
  • Chimps Are Sticking Grass In Their Ears And Rears As They Embrace “Pointless” Fad
  • Hui Te Rangiora: Old Māori Legend Suggests They May Have Discovered Antarctica 1,000 Years Before Europeans
  • “Potential Impact On Saturn”: Astronomers Appeal For Help As Video Appears To Show Object Hitting The Gas Giant
  • What Is Prosopometamorphopsia? The “Exceedingly Rare” Condition That Made A Patient See Faces As Dragons
  • Are We In An Enormous Void? It Could Explain What’s Wrong With Our Model Of The Universe
  • Woylies Boing Back Into Western Australia Thanks To Groundbreaking Wildlife Project
  • North America’s Oldest Pterosaur And Turtle Fossils Found In Arizona’s Petrified Forest
  • Proposed “Dark Dwarfs” Near The Galactic Center Could Reveal The Nature Of Dark Matter
  • Watch: 18-Kilometer-High Ash Cloud Looms Over Indonesia’s Mount Lewotobi Laki Laki After “Explosive” Eruption
  • “ShipGoo001”: Mystery Of Entirely New Lifeform Discovered Coating A Great Lakes Ship
  • Rare White Humpback Whale Calf Filmed By Drone Off Australia’s East Coast
  • Who Was Buried At Cave Of Salome: A Female Disciple, Jesus’ Midwife, Or A Princess?
  • “Hidden” Changes To US Health Data Swapping “Gender” For “Sex” Spark Fears For Public Trust
  • Easter Island Was Never As Isolated As We Thought – Study Puts That “Strange Argument” To Bed
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version