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Warren County Genealogical Society |
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(513) 695-1144 |
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wcgs@co.warren.oh.us |
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Alphabetical Surname Index | Cemetery Description | Virtual Cemetery | Cemetery Main Page |
This online index only lists the individual, death date (if
known) and reference page. We are creating a master index of everyone who is
buried in this county and their burial location to aid researchers. We are
especially in need of people buried here who have no stones or whose stones no
longer exist. If you have any of this information or if you have additional information for anyone who is buried in
this cemetery,
please
email the Warren County Genealogical Society.
Cemetery Name |
Miami Monthly Meeting of Friends Cemetery |
Variant Name(s) | Friends (Hicksite & Quaker) Cemetery or Waynesville Friends Cemetery |
Township |
Wayne |
Status |
Inactive |
First Known Burial |
1808 |
General Condition |
Average Maintenance |
Tombstone Condition |
Fair / Good |
OGS Cemetery # |
12328 |
Location: |
South side of High Street, about 100 feet west of S.4th Street, starting on the west side of the Orthodox Friends [Red Brick] Meeting House in Waynesville, Ohio |
Coordinates: |
39° 31' 48.64", 84° 05' 29.90" |
STR/ VMD |
Section 6, Township 4 East, Range 4 North |
Property Account: |
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Parcel ID: |
See above |
Map: |
GIS Map of Location Plat Map Township Map |
Cemetery History |
The Miami Monthly Meeting of Friends was established on the 13th day of the 10th month,1803 being a part of the Restone Quarterly Meeting and the Baltimore Annual Meeting. The eastern boundary was the Hocking River, the southern was the Ohio River, but there was no limit to the north or to the west. The Miami Quarterly Meeting was opened, Fifth month 1809. The building of the White Brick Meetinghouse at Waynesville was begun in 1811 to accommodate the Quarterly Meeting. In 1828, a division in philosophy was followed by withdrawals by one side or the other into so-called "Hicksite" and so called "Orthodox" branches. Further separations occurred within the Orthodox body. When the separation occurred in 1828 , the Yearly Meeting split into two bodies: Indiana Yearly Meeting Orthodox (later Friends United Meeting) and Indiana Yearly Meeting Hicksite (later Friends General Conference). At Waynesville the Hicksite body retained the white Brick Meeting House and in 1836, the Orthodox body constructed the Red Brick Meeting House. In 1804 Miami Monthly Meeting purchased this land to use as a graveyard. Burials were made without regard to status or family association, but rather by date of death. Some of the earliest graves are marked with a plain rock obtained from a nearby creek while later markers are typically small limestone headstones, often carved with only the individuals' names (sometimes only initials) and date of death. There is also a Revolutionary War soldier buried here, showing that the early Friends were tolerant even while maintaining the peace testimony. Civil War veteran, John L. Newmann is also buried here. When the two meetings separated in 1828, the graveyard was also divided. The sugar maple in the middle of the cemetery is on the line that goes from the street through the tree to the edge of the property. The portion between this line and the Red Brick belongs to the Wilmington Year Meeting, while the western portion belongs to Miami Monthly Meeting. The Hicksites began burials in 1832. The cemetery is shown in two parts on the 1867 Warren County Wall Map. The eastern part (bottom of map) is the original cemetery and the western part (top of map) is the new (Hicksite) part. New sign added 2007. |
Cemetery Transcriptions |
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Gravestone Images |
Gravestone photos for the Warren
County, Ohio Virtual Cemetery Project are being posted to the
Warren County OHGenWeb Project |
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©2007-2010 Warren County Genealogical Society
For non-commercial use only
This page was last updated on
01 October 2010