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welcome to Pennsport

And now, it’s time for another exciting installment of ‘places where Philadelphians used to be buried.’  Today, we explore the parking lot and primary structure inhabiting the space between 5th and 6th Streets on the south side of Washington Avenue.  According to Find A Grave, this parking lot began operation as an ‘association’ cemetery in 1841, selling plots to the low-income residents of the Southwark area for $10 a pop.  Two decades later, with the onset of hostilities, the cemetery would become a final(ish) resting place for local Civil War veterans.  As shown below in the image taken from Samuel L. Smedley’s 1862 Philadelphia Atlas, it was renamed the Union Burial Ground, alternately known as Sixth Street Union.

In 1862

The carnage of the war would make the next decade the most active in the cemetery’s history.  Below, an image taken from G.M. Hopkins 1875 Philadelphia Atlas shows that the grounds used for burial, already occupying a section of space just across 6th Street, had extended southward to Federal Street.

By 1875

By the end of the war, numerous Civil War veterans and their families had been interred in this location, totaling roughly 2000 graves.  According to Roots Web, the cemetery officially closed its gates to new residents in 1906, consequently forming the Union Burial Ground Society to handle its assets.  The photo below, dated by Find a Grave as being sometime in the 1950s, lends some suggestion as to how these assets were handled.

Not so well, apparently

As with other neighborhood-bound burial sites that we’ve discussed (Lafayette CemeteryRonaldson’s Cemetery), the hallowed ground was greeted by the 20th century with neglect, vandalism and disrepair.  The insertion of I-95 and Delaware Ave. through the Southwark neighborhood in the 1960s helped to hasten the cemetery’s demise.  The photo below, taken from Temple University Library’s Digital Collections, shows the cemetery in 1966, badly in need of some weeding.

PHA towers in the background in 1966

In 1970, the land was sold to a supermarket.  The photo below, also taken from the Temple University Library, shows a construction worker in the midst of the unenviable task of exhuming and repackaging the deceased.

Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio

The dead were subsequently reburied in the Philadelphia Memorial Park in Frazer, PA.  Today, the 1st Oriental Supermarket that stands on the lot demonstrates Southwark’s continued appeal to immigrant populations, serving in recent years as an important destination for the city’s Cambodian and Vietnamese residents.

Supermarket

The image below shows the remains of a single wall recalling the plot’s century-long service to the deceased.  The holes running along the top of the wall on 6th Street show where the wrought-iron fence once stood.

The wall is all that remains

Where the fence once stood

–David Tomar

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Posted in Pennsport | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments
  • qweezyq

    thank god the cemetary is gone, so i can get my cheap tofu.

  • qweezyq

    thank god the cemetary is gone, so i can get my cheap tofu.

  • http://hiddencityphila.org/2012/07/anticipating-the-casino-hot-potato/ Anticipating The Casino Hot Potato | Hidden City Philadelphia

    [...] Philly takes us back to the Sixth Street Union cemetery at 6th  & Federal Streets, which housed the remains of Philadel…Abandoned by its proprietors and besieged by development, the remains were exhumed and reburied in [...]

  • 3rd&Brown

    Fascinating.

  • Loubob

    I think it’s more than sad to have dug up the graves of Civil War veterans—including that of my ancestor—-and disrupt and disturb their final resting places–to make room for—ultimately—a supermarket—-and an unsightly one at that  It demonstrates how very little respect there is for those who gave all to fight for their country.  It makes me wonder if there were no other tracts nearby where a supermarket might have been built.  I would have liked to have visited my ancestor’s grave before it was dug up and dumped into a mass grave outside the city. 

  • Loubob

    I visited PMP for the purpose of getting a government marker for the grave of my Civil War ancestor—Sgt. Moses H. Keen, a fireman from the Weccacoe Fire Company in South Philadelphia and who died of disease at Harrison’s Landing.  While there would have been no charge for a government marker, I was told it would cost around $1,000 to ready the ground for such a marker.  My brother has said the ground where our ancestor now lies buried (with other Civil War veterans) is too swampy to hold a marker.  I guess that is the reason for the high cost of readying the ground there.  The Union Ground fence is there—and for that I am grateful–but it would have been nice to see a special marker placed there for those who fought in the Civil War and others buried in the Union Ground who contributed so much to the history of Philadelphia. 

  • http://twitter.com/NFR_PHL chris dougherty
  • Jake

    Aren’t many Asian cultures very hesitant about building on a former grave site? Surprised that an Asian grocery store would choose to use this site given its history.

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