This Week in Lincolnville: Mowing Maplewood

Mon, 05/18/2015 - 6:45pm

    Our family mowed the grass at Maplewood Cemetery for 25 seasons, give or take five years. Wally did it alone for a few years, then turned the job over to our son, Bill, and Ethan McKittrick when both boys were in college. They moved on, and Wally picked it up again. I joined him for the last three or four years until about 2010 or so when we both “retired”. In cleaning out some old papers recently, I came upon notes I’d made while mowing. Sweaty, grass-stained and stuffed in a pocket, I’d meant to use them for a piece I intended to call:

    Mowing Maplewood

    Every afternoon at 4 p.m. a fellow we knew slightly came to Maplewood to his family’s lot.  He stood quietly at his wife’s grave, head bowed, perhaps praying, or remembering, certainly missing her. When Wally spotted him, even if he was at the other end of the large cemetery, he’d stop the mower and take a break himself, so as not to disturb the man.  This apparently daily ritual went on for years, until finally he passed away and joined her.

             Cemeteries are, after all, the place where a life ends, often the only place for a mourning relative or friend to feel close to their loved one. I remember seeing a young woman I knew, sitting and weeping at the grave of her mother, gone way too soon, before the daughter could bring son-in-law or grandchildren into that mother’s life.

              A few graves, where someone’s child or too-young wife lie, are busy places; flower beds are planted and re-planted throughout the season, balloons may flutter, a bench, an untouched wine bottle, a stuffed animal, a favorite hat appear -- a sense of unfinished or unceasing mourning. A couple of gravestones have carefully-placed pebbles left on them, a sign of respect left by a visitor.

             Do you remember when Memorial Day was called Decoration Day? If you do, then you’re as old as I am. It was the day to decorate the graves, a ritual that’s become tied up with remembering our country’s war dead, and then more tied up still with honoring all military veterans with a flag on their grave. Sometimes even members of a fraternal order get a flag. The first day we mowed after the flags appeared was always a bit exciting, as the usually still atmosphere of gray stone and green grass came alive with movement. The fluttering of flags couldn’t be missed, red, white and blue cloth flapping and twisting out of the corner of the eye as we pushed our mowers up and down the rows of tombstones.

             There’s a lot of time to think while pushing a lawnmower. I found myself wondering about the mothers and their lost babies lying in old cemeteries. Then wondering if maybe those mothers, especially the ones who perished in childbirth ought to have a flag too, dying, in pain, while bringing forth the next generation for humankind.  Surely as worthy of a flag as dying to save the nation.

                  Cemeteries are unique places, part lawn, part field, part heath. Because they’re kept mown on a regular basis, to thrive a plant must survive the resultant dwarfing of being constantly cut back. But this isn’t your lawn, where “weeds” are often ruthlessly rooted out with herbicides or crowded out with aggressive, well-fed grasses, then mown to resemble an even carpet. Here, when a plot or a whole row has been fortified with real topsoil and lawn fertilizer, the fast-growing, lush grass gives away its secret by its deep, emerald green color.  For the guy mowing the lawn, these aren’t the favorite plots. Mow it on Monday and by Friday it’s already looking over-grown again. People contract for this job, usually being paid for just so many mowings a  season, so the whole cemetery looks neat and trimmed for only a week at most, before the fertilized portions take off. The mowers won’t be back for several weeks.

             A good part of Maplewood consists of thin, sour soil where not much more than some rough lichens and plantains barely survive.  Many of the older graves are found in this harsh soil; they date to about 1850, when the cemetery, then known as Juniper Grove, was established. (Graves with earlier dates probably were moved from the Ulmer Cemetery out on the point at Ducktrap.) A newer section with a large bedrock outcropping has similar thin soil.

             One of the ways I passed the time while pushing my lawnmower along the rows, around the stones, and up and down the hollows of sunken graves was to take a plant inventory. In no particular order I found wild strawberries, blueberries, cranberries, partridge berries, yellow and orange cowslips (a kind of wild primrose), purple and white violets, hawkweed, stunted yarrow, dandelions, buttercups, Quaker blue bonnets (bluets), forget me nots, bedstraw, and clover. Oh, and daisies, rabbits foot clover, winterberry, cinquefoil, Indian paint brush, Johnny jump ups, maiden pinks, and day lilies.

             Under the maples on the upper, older sections, along Ducktrap Road, the mosses form a thick, cushy layer underfoot, damp and green. A couple of plots are covered with white reindeer moss – soft when it’s foggy, brittle the rest of the time – intertwined with the red berries and deep green leaves of some miniature, twining plant.

             Along the back road that divides woods from cemetery, lily of the valley grows, along with jack-in-the-pulpit, lady slippers, ferns of all kinds, raspberries, and where the ground turns boggy, enormous skunk cabbages. Mayflowers still grow in secret places, just as they did sixty years ago when children walked all the way from Youngtown Road to Maplewood to gather them for their mother.

              Half-wild roses grow on some of the oldest graves, lovely, little white blossoms with yellow centers; they only last a few days in June, then send up persistent shoots all through the surrounding grass. I imagine some 19 th Century gardener bringing them from home to plant on his loved one’s grave. And during a certain week or two in May huge pink and magenta patches of creeping phlox run over the grassy “roads” between the rows. The monument to “Willie L. Keene, son of Oliver and Waitie Keene, age 21 yrs. 8 mo. 21 days” stands amid such a patch, and on a sunny day when each individual floret is wide-open to the sky, his grave looks as if some painter spilled his colors on the ground. Both Wally and I so hated to mow the phlox that we went around it until the next time when the blooms were gone.

             Once I’d inventoried the plants I’d turn to the stones themselves. The tall, phallic monuments to the great men of our town’s day – the merchants, ship captains, or anyone with enough money to commemorate themselves and their families, dominate. Those aren’t generally the ones favored by the crows, though. On a foggy day you can almost always spot a crow sitting decoratively, if spookily, on a simple stone in the middle of Maplewood. Some family lots are set off from their neighbors (probably actual neighbors in life) with granite rails forming a fence. Today a simple small square at each corner, perhaps with the family’s initial, mark off the lot.

    CALENDAR 

     TUESDAY, May 19

    Women’s Club, noon, Bayleaf Cottages

    Special Town Meeting, LCS Budget, 6 p.m., LCS


    WEDNESDAY, May 20

    Memorial Day Parade Committee, 5:30, Town Office

    Recreation Committee meets, 6:30, Town Office

    Library Presentation and Concert, 7 p.m., Lincolnville Library


    THURSDAY, May 21
    Free Soup Café, noon-1 p.m., Community Building, 18 Searsmont Road

    L.I.A. Potluck and Meeting, 5:30 p.m., L.I.A. Building


    FRIDAY, May 22
    Children’s Story Time, 10 a.m., Lincolnville Library


    SUNDAY, May 24

    Kate Braestrup preaches, 9;30 a.m., UCC

     

    Every week:

    AA meetings, Tuesdays & Fridays at 12:15 p.m., Wednesdays & Sundays at 6 p.m.,United Christian Church

    Lincolnville Community Library, open Tuesdays, 4-7, Wednesdays, 2-7, Fridays and Saturdays, 9 a.m.-noon. For information call 763-4343.

    Soup Café, every Thursday, noon—1p.m., Community Building, Sponsored by United Christian Church. Free, though donations to the Good Neighbor Fund are appreciated

    Schoolhouse Museum open by appointment only until June 2015: call Connie Parker, 789-5984


    COMING UP

    Tuesday, May 26, Five Town CSD Budget Meeting, Camden Hills Regional High School

    Tuesday, June 9, Election Day for Municipal Officials and referendum questions, 8 a.m. – 8 p.m.

    Thursday, June 11, 6 p.m., Annual Town Meeting

    June 18, 5:30 p.m. will be Eighth Grade graduation

    June 20, a half day, will be the last day of school and Field Day

             One family chose a huge rose quartz boulder, planted on either side with rhododendrons that continually over grow it., while another erected an old millstone, complete with the iron hardware that enabled it to turn and grind the grain at one of our town’s gristmills. There’s a plain field boulder with a brass plaque inlaid, a small marble fleur de lys marked “Baby”, even a handmade concrete pallet with a name scrawled into the wet cement, probably with a finger or a stick.

             My children’s favorite was always the crypt-like tomb up by the road, in about the middle of Maplewood. The creepy thing, they thought, were the double stove pipes that jut out of the large mound behind the grave’s padlocked door. I used to think they put the bodies there in winter, waiting for the ground to thaw for burial, but once I started mowing I noticed the lintel stone. Hanson and Mary Mills lie at rest inside; he was a grain merchant and lived at the Beach. He died in 1915, she in 1910. Still not sure what the stove pipes were for.

             Why not take a stroll in your neighborhood cemetery this month? There are 25 listed on the Lincolnville Historical Society’s websiteSeveral are on private property; ask landowners for permission to walk in them, but most are easily accessed by the public. The active ones – Center L’ville Burying Ground, French, Hillside, Hills, Maplewood, Union, and Youngtown – contain early graves all the way up to the present. Some of the others such as Cross, Fletcher, Norton, Pitcher, and Sylvester are accessible from the road. Each individual cemetery, for example Union has its own webpage including names of burials, a google map, photos and a history. Corelyn Senn has been writing a monthly column in The Camden Herald  for the past year or so. Most of these columns can be found on the LHS site.

             Be sure to come prepared with bug stuff, including tick repellant!


    Road Closing Issue

    Four upcoming items on the June 9 ballot concern four town roads. The Board of Selectmen decided, on a 3-2 vote, to propose making those roads private, i.e. the town will no longer maintain them.  Since the vote will be taken by secret ballot and not discussed and voted on at Town Meeting two days later, some residents have been debating the issue on the Lincolnville Discussion Board, an offshoot of the Bulletin Board. On this site people can talk about political issues such as this, subjects which are discouraged on the larger LBB.  Contact Pat Putnam, manager of the boards, if you want to sign up and be part of the discussion.


    Women’s Club Tea Party

    The LWC meets Tuesday, May 20 at Bayleaf Cottages on Atlantic Highway for a tea party and luncheon. Wear a festive hat and bring your favorite tea cup! Lunch is $15.


    Library Presentation and Concert

    Don’t miss this month’s talk by author Jim Nichols, short story writer and novelist, followed by Freshly Cut Grass, a Maine bluegrass band, to be held Wednesday May 20 at the Library at 7 p.m. Contact Rosey Gerry, 975-5432, to reserve tickets which are $10 each with proceeds benefiting the Library.


    L.I.A. resumes meeting

    The first meeting of the Lincolnville Improvement Association will be this Thursday, May 21, 5:30 p.m. at the L.I.A. building, 33 Beach Road. A potluck will be followed by Cindy Dunham and Sheila Polson bringing everyone up to date on the Lincolnville Library. All welcome!


    Spring Fling

    A public supper and entertainment, Tranquility Grange’s popular, annual Spring Fling, will be held this Saturday, May 23 starting at 5 p.m. The supper, featuring baked beans, casseroles, salads and desserts will be followed by the Variety Show at 6 p.m. Tickets are $10 for adults, ages 5-12, $5, and if you’re under 4 or over 90 you get in free! If this is your first Grange supper, a word to the wise: get there  closer to 5 than to 6! All proceeds benefit the Grange building upkeep. Contact Rosemary Winslow with questions or if you can help with food: 763-3343.


    Reverend Kate Braestrup

     

    This Sunday, May 24 Kate Braestrup, Chaplain of the Maine Warden Service, will be in the pulpit at United Christian Church’s 9:30 a.m. worship service for her monthly sermon at the church.


    Camden High School Alumni

    This year’s annual Alumni Banquet, the 110 th one, will be held Friday, August 14 in the Islesboro Ballroom at Point Lookout in Northport. The doors open from 4-5 p.m. for the Silent Auction and cash bar with dinner served at 6 p.m. Tables will be reserved for the reunion classes of ’45, ’50, ’55, ’60, and ’65.

    To donate to the Silent Auction or to suggest a Special Recognition Award nominee, contact David Ames; call 789-5118 or email. Tickets, at $30 each, go on sale June 1. Send a check, payable to CHS Alumni Association along with a SASE to Sheila McFarland, 448 Youngtown Road, Lincolnville, ME  04849. For more information, contact Gene Stinston, 763-3393.


    Where are our L’ville kids now?

    It’s always fun to read or hear about the young people who grew up here, went to LCS and C-RHS/CHRHS and then on into their grown up lives. Tom (T.C. when he was young) Dickens  has been hired to be NJ Governor Chris Christie’s national field director for his prospective presidential campaign. Tom’s the son of Char and Tom Dickens of Lincolnville.


    A Couple of Odd Bits

    An email from a friend over the week-end: “Yesterday on the flight back, the plane flew over Lincolnville at 30,000 feet — British Airways always takes this approach and I can see Lincolnville, if the weather's good, and I always get a window seat. Very clear view of Coleman Pond, with the wetland and the quarry, and Norton Pond and Pitcher Pond.  The Center is a tiny crossroads — it looks so small, as does the Beach.  Only those of us who live here know how big it all really is.”

    And in a Lincolnville Bulletin Board post: “Fiddleheadsat 379 Camden Road, on Rt 52, .9 mi north of Youngtown Inn, .4 mi south of Drake's Corner Store. East side of the road. 1# bags in red cooler by tree... $5 each.”