Mountain West Bank tackles cemetery cleanup
WALLACE –– Tucked back among the trees, nestled on the west side of Nine Mile Canyon sits Nine Mile Cemetery, the resting place of almost 200 years of Wallace history.
On Wednesday, the staff of Mountain West Bank and a handful of volunteers tackled the massive job of going up to the cemetery for a cleanup project.
Each year, MWB takes a day off from their regular banking duties to give back to the community and over the years they have completed or helped with projects like painting the senior center and building playground equipment at Osburn’s Lions Park.
Nine Mile Cemetery is unique for many reasons. Beyond its historical significance, the cemetery is carved into the hillside of a narrow canyon and feels more like a park than the final resting place for more than 4,000 people. The terrain is anything, but simple, and towering evergreens dot the precipitous landscape.
A who’s who of Wallace area royalty and infamy are buried at Nine Mile, including members of the Magnuson, Voltolini, Bardelli, and Rossi families. The cemetery also includes Ed Pulaski, as well as many other survivors and victims of the 1910 fire.
Matt Beehner sits on the Nine Mile Cemetery Board, working tirelessly with his fellow board members to maintain the 40-acre memorial site, but the task is near impossible. So, when MWB decided to volunteer their services to the cemetery they were welcomed with open arms.
“This is the first time in a long time that we’ve had anybody,” Beehner said. “It’s been 10 years since we’ve had anybody volunteer like this.”
MWB Branch Manager Gina Doerschel had been looking for a worthwhile project to take on and when she was approached by a member of her staff about the cemetery, she recognized the need immediately.
“We talked as a team about the volunteer opportunities available to us and one of our tellers mentioned that they were always looking for people to help clean up the Nine Mile Cemetery,” Doerschel said. “We then contacted them to see if they would be on board with us spending the day there. We really wanted to make an impact and it didn’t sound like five to 10 of us could really do that, so we got to thinking how fun it would be if we could get other members of the community to join us.”
Not only did they get a handful of volunteers from the community, but MWB President and CEO Scott Anderson decided to join them in their endeavor.
The group spent roughly eight hours at the site, weed eating, raking pine needles, picking up trash, and cleaning up the woody debris throughout the cemetery.
The group had just one rule they had to follow in their work: Don’t touch the headstones.
According to Doerschel, many families enjoy coming up to the cemetery and maintaining the headstones and gravesites of their relatives. Some of them have even turned the curbed graves into beautiful gardens, with blooming flowers and vegetation.
However, the marked and maintained graves are just the tip of the cemetery. Over the years, Beehner and the other board members have been responsible for mapping out the edges of the cemetery and doing their best to identify as many marked gravesites as possible.
“In 2005, just going by headstones there were about 2,500 people buried here,” Beehner said. “But through my research on Ancestry (genealogy website Ancestry.com), looking at every death certificate from about 1910 on, these death certificates show if a person was buried, cremated, or moved. And by my research, there’s over 4,000.”
The staggering disparity between the number of clearly marked graves and the number of people who reportedly were buried at the cemetery has fueled Beehner’s work. Because of this, he and the board have been using grant funds and personal funds to locate gravesites and place markers on them.
“We’re always thankful to have the opportunity to give back to our community,” Doerschel said. “This wasn’t one of the easier projects we’ve done, but it was definitely one of the most worthwhile.”