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New projects at Arlington cemeteries aim to resurrect interest in past leaders, local communities

Bricked pillars line a black fence that says "Arlington Heritage Memorial Grounds."
Kailey Broussard
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四虎影院
The Arlington Historical Society, Arlington Heritage Memorial Grounds Corporation and city have collaborated to clean up Arlington Heritage Memorial Grounds at 600 W. Arkansas Lane.

Two separate efforts in historic Arlington cemeteries seek to link visitors to the city and Tarrant County鈥檚 past鈥攍iterally.

O.K. Carter is an author, historian and holds a seat on the city鈥檚 Landmark Preservation Commission. The former Arlington Star-Telegram publisher has published essays and produced

But even with his extensive experience in city history, Carter says finding historic graves near downtown remains a hassle.

鈥淓very time I come here, I have to rediscover where things are,鈥 Carter says.

Arlington Cemetery at 801 S. Mary St. is a city-owned property that holds several cemetery sites, some of which are as old as the original town, and The site is the final resting place for nine mayors, several postmasters, war veterans and original settlers. A partial list of the interned reads like an Arlington roadmap.

鈥淚f you drive around Arlington, you鈥檒l see it, looks like street names鈥擟ollins, Cooper 鈥 Abram. All of that, those people are here,鈥 Carter says.

Also on the list is Mary Street, which was named after Mary Carlisle Cravens. Her husband, Dr. M. H. Cravens, smoothed the foot path to the cemetery with his tractor to visit her grave. The path became her namesake street.

The commission (LPC), after mulling navigation difficulties with Carter, named the gravel roads that connect the cemetery after some of the most notable buried historical figures and are developing QR codes to install at a couple dozen sites.

鈥淚 expect people to eventually be jealous and put their own QR signs up,鈥 Carter says while standing near George Finger and Weeks ways.

A gravel road winds through Arlington Cemetery, marked by new orange street signs that say Weeks Way and George Finger Way.
Kailey Broussard
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四虎影院
New street signs in Arlington Cemetery mark gravel roads named after notable people buried in the graveyards, including George Finger Way and Weeks Way.

People behind another site two miles south has a similar idea in the works.

The Arlington Heritage Memorial Grounds Corporation (AHMGC) plans to install QR codes in its multi-cemetery site around the 600 block of West Arkansas Lane. The site holds three cemeteries: the Mill Branch Cemetery, the Middleton Tate Johnson Family Cemetery and the Arlington Colored Cemetery. The site, between 1900 and the 1950s, was the only place where Black families could bury their loved ones.

Fundraising efforts to install QR codes and pathways are the latest in decades efforts to pay homage to the people buried, including Johnson, known as the founding father of Tarrant County, and nearly 80 known graves of Black and African American residents.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been an ongoing project and now it鈥檚 really come into its own. It鈥檚 going to be a great tool for education,鈥 says Geraldine Mills, the society's executive director.

In 2000, the society removed cabins that had been placed atop the graves of Black people. Arlington Historical Society built a list of the interned and constructed an ornate fence around the property鈥攁s well as fundraised for repairs when a and damaged several gravestones in 2021.

Arlington Historical Society members took control of maintenance and cleanup in the 1980s after decades of different philanthropic groups leading piecemeal cleanups.

Mills, who is also an AHMGC board member, says she expects progress to be made on the paths and codes in the next six months. Volunteers have also made constant progress on finding more information on those buried onsite.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a great attempt at connecting history and connecting people in this town because 鈥 everybody contributed in some way,鈥 Mills says.

Cataloguing local history

The research Mills and the Historical Society are doing has filled in substantial gaps in the archives of Arlington鈥檚 Black history over the past couple of decades.

Mills鈥 work to collect records and stories from The Hill, Arlington鈥檚 segregation-era neighborhood specifically dedicated to African Americans, was instrumental to the ongoing docuseries 鈥淓choes from the Hill.鈥 The first episode aired Juneteenth weekend, and four new episodes will air over the next four years.

Carl Pointer, one of the interviewees on the first episode, brought an extensive list of family members to the Historical Society that were buried in the African American cemetery.

Mills says interest in Arlington鈥檚 broader history鈥攊ncluding its Black history鈥攈as picked up recently, as people and communities reckon with their past. She says the current climate offers a time for learning and healing.

鈥淚 think that鈥檚 what they鈥檙e seeing this as, is realizing the struggle that a lot of these people that are buried out there had through years, but yet they continued through faith in their religion, faith in their family and learned from one another. They were community and contributed greatly to Arlington鈥檚 growth,鈥 Mills says.

Arlington鈥檚 growth has made capturing history difficult at times, Carter says. The town grew in half a century to become the in the United States.

鈥淢ost of that growth takes place after 1950, and so what you have is a city that all of a sudden switches over the next half century from less than 8,000 people to more than 400,000,鈥 he says.

Additionally, around half of residents had a different address a decade ago, Carter says, as people look for convenient places to settle down and commutes to Dallas and Fort Worth.

鈥淓ven though the town is growing all the time, Arlington鈥檚 mid-cities location is just so ideal for access to all the jobs in the Metroplex that people can come and go,鈥 he says.

However, that will not stop local historians from cataloguing local history, he says.

鈥淚t鈥檚 鈥 a fairly straightforward situation. Read signs, QR codes; history comes alive again,鈥 he says.

Got a tip? Email Kailey Broussard at kbroussard@kera.org. You can follow Kailey on Twitter

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Kailey Broussard covers health for 四虎影院. Previously, they covered the city of Arlington for four years across multiple news organizations and helped start the Arlington Report.