The Historic Oakland Foundation now has a page up on their web site describing some of the damage to the property with a few photographs from the grounds, here:

Historic Oakland Cemetery Badly Damaged

As they state and as I discovered on Saturday, the property is currently closed for the reasons described in the article.

If you’ve enjoyed my writing and photography on this site and have ever thought about supporting it, please consider making a financial contribution to Oakland’s rebuilding efforts instead. The address for donations (also listed at the end of their article) is:

Historic Oakland Foundation
248 Oakland Avenue SE
Atlanta, GA 30312

Here are a couple of photographs I took back in November, 2007, while researching the Cemetery’s history, showing the Fickett monument (click the pictures for full-sized images):

oakland_cemetery_fickett_monument_1.jpg

oakland_cemetery_fickett_monument_2.jpg

Here’s that same monument now (photograph from the Foundation’s article):

archway_tn.jpg

If you’ve been following my series of articles on the Cemetery or have looked at any of my Flickr pictures of the property, you know I consider it a treasured historical and community resource unlike anything I had ever seen until I started learning about it. If you’re able to make even a small donation to helping the Cemetery’s reconstruction efforts, you’ll be honoring the memories of those who are buried there and you’ll also be recognizing the critical significance of Atlanta’s few remaining truly historical sites. Give Oakland a bit of help and I guarantee you that the next time you consider the meaning of some place of history or community that matters to you, you’ll look at it with a greater awareness and understanding of what these places really mean to our lives, our neighborhoods, and our place in this world.

I’ll be resuming my articles on the Cemetery and the neighborhood’s history within a few days….



Comments

This entry was posted on Monday, March 17th, 2008 at 7:24 pm and is filed under atlanta, oakland. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
4 Comments so far

  1. A u d e eNo Gravatar on March 19, 2008 7:42 am

    I’ve been following your article series Dale..disaster by nature could somehow be part of the cemetery’s history.
    Your pictures speak loud and I wish the destroyed place will get immediate recovery help from the community..

  2. DaleNo Gravatar on March 19, 2008 7:17 pm

    Hi, Audee … you make a good point about the disaster becoming part of the cemetery’s history, something I’ve thought about and will be including in my next article.

    Thanks very much for coming by and leaving a comment, good to hear from you.

    Bye for now,

    Dale

  3. DianeNo Gravatar on March 22, 2008 1:03 am

    What a crying shame :(

  4. jenni@ThirteenElevenNo Gravatar on March 28, 2008 8:17 pm

    So sad, I watch the news special last night on T.V. The storm will become part of the history. That is a great point.

    Glad I found your blog. Look forward to reading more.

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