About seven miles west of Lincoln on Highway 18 is a small cluster of tombstones on the north side of the highway. When I was a girl my grandmother and I waded through waist-high weeds in order to see the stones, and I remember being thrilled to find one of them had been a musician in what I then thought was the Civil War. Nearby still stood the foundation of an abandoned farmhouse, and what we had found was a family plot.
Of course, we weren't the first to find it, but when you are a child you like to pretend otherwise. Now the plot is mown and easily seen from the highway and I still visit it on occasion, but never with that first thrill of discovery.
I know from my more recent visits that the tombstone of the "musician" actually belongs to a War of 1812 veteran, not a Civil War veteran. I know that several of those buried there are children who died of diphtheria in 1878. Even more sadly, their father ' a Civil War veteran ' had been drowned in the Saline River just weeks after their death. How did the wife and mother of the family cope with such a barrage of bad fortune?
Here is a transcription of the tombstones:
Joshua SimmonsWhile indexing the 1950s Lincoln Sentinel-Republicans for obituaries, I found a series of articles about the little unnamed plot and some of those buried there. It is interesting to see how the story of the people buried on the hill came to light. The articles appear in chronological order below.
July 1, 1954: "Story Of An Early Day Drowning Is Recalled By A Former Resident"In addition, I recently found an article about Mr. Minnick in the Sylvan Grove Sentinel written shortly before his death.
And the big news: Another Civil War veteran has been found at this site! Joshua's father
Edward Simmons' grave
has been found and marked with a government tombstone and he will be honored in a ceremony on May 26, 2012.
The Simmons plot is officially an unnamed cemetery. It was used by a pioneer family that endured more than its share of hardships.
At least two of the people buried here are veterans, Joshua Simmons (Civil War) and his father-in-law Charles G. Minnick (War of 1812). Mr. Simmons drowned in the Saline River in July 1878; two of his children died two months later of diphthera.
The inscription on this side is for two sons of Joshua Simmons, Charles W. and Allen Simmons.
The inscription on this side is for Rebecca Simmons, mother of Joshua.
In the 1950s, several newspaper stories about the abandoned family plot came to the attention of Arthur Rose, a "former Lincoln boy" then working for the Kansas Veterans Commission. Mr. Rose researched the case and a tombstone was erected for Joshua Simmons, which reads: "Co. F, 13 Reg't, Iowa Inf, June 13, 1831, July 27, 1878".
In researching Joshua Simmons, Mr. Rose also learned that his father-in-law was probably buried on the site. After more research, a stone was ordered and erected for Mr. Minnick as well. It reads:
"Maryland, Dummer 1 Reg't, Arty Md Militia, War of 1812, May 24, 1798, March 15, 1889".