Lane Street Project: “City responsible for old cemetery”


Wilson Daily Times, 17 February 1990.

This op-ed piece ran in the Wilson Daily Times in February 1990, shortly after the city acknowledged its ownership of Vick cemetery.

A few notable passages:

  • “Although as many as 2,000 people may be buried there, only 30-some graves are marked …”  (Two thousand seems like a low estimate of the number of burials in Vick, and absolutely more than 30 graves were marked. In 1995, Wilson’s city manager was quoted estimating that there were approximately 200 marked graves and 75-100 “intact, legible” headstones.)
  • “Those persons buried beneath this littered and unkempt ground deserve the respect and dignity we would accord any deceased.”
  • “Insofar as possible, the Vick cemetery and the individual graves must be restored. The city can do no less for its deceased citizens.”
  • “Mobilizing volunteers in the community can get the cleanup off to a low-cost start. Civic clubs, Boy Scouts, church groups and other organizations could take pride in helping restore a piece of Wilson history.”
  • “Identifying and marking each grave may be impossible, but every identification that is historically and humanly possible is the duty of the city.”

Another four years passed before Wilson made serious effort to meet the challenge outlined in the Daily Times. Vick cemetery is no longer a dumping ground, but it still “bears little resemblance to a cemetery.” The graves were not restored, or even identified. Rather, they were pulled from the ground, stacked in storage for a few years, then discarded. No known record exists of the thousands of burials in Vick cemetery.

6 comments

  1. Our job is to continue to tell the sad truth of the matter..over and over. One thing is for certain….GOD SEES AND HEARS ALL THINGS. We don’t know what the end will be ….but He knows. Let us march on…….Thank you Lisa Henderson.

  2. I visit today it was so peaceful on the land makes me want to search for those unmarked graves there’s got to be more history on that burial ground and who was buried there Lord have Mercy! The City can do more to restore this cemetery.

    1. Thank you for visiting Vick Cemetery and paying respects to the thousands buried there. I am working to develop a database of Vick burials, drawing mainly from death certificates and obituaries. The work is complicated by the fact that early death certificates often listed place of burial as simply “Wilson, N.C.” or sometimes “Rountree Cemetery,” which could have meant Vick or the adjoining Odd Fellows or Rountree Cemeteries. All were known together as “Rountree.”

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