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Cemetery walk includes the famous and the lesser-known

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The Elmwood Cemetery Mausoleum is a new addition to the Sycamore History Museum's Cemetery Walk this year. (Photo provided)

SYCAMORE – Ordinary and extraordinary people.

According to Michelle Donahoe, both will be portrayed in the annual Elmwood Heritage Cemetery Walk, which will be held at Elmwood Cemetery in Sycamore on Oct. 7.

“We pick famous people, and then other people that may not be so prominent,” said Donahoe, executive director of the Sycamore History Museum.

“Sometimes somebody will suggest someone and I will pick someone around them,” museum archives chairman Ann Rosenfeld said.

The cemetery, which dates to March of 1865, is one of the best-kept cemeteries in the county, Rosenfeld said. It is also the county’s third largest. To prevent groups from having to walk too far, Donahoe said the people to be featured are usually selected based on location.

This year’s walk, Rosenfeld said, will start at the new mausoleum on the south side of the cemetery.

“We used to meet at the rotunda,” she said. “But this year we decided to do something different.”

After a brief talk about how the mausoleum got its name, the group will visit the grave sites of the Peter Bier family, who spent time in a Russian prison before emigrating to the United States; Dr. John Frederick Eggers, a physician who also served in the Korean conflict; and Kenneth Raymond, a longtime local policeman.

The group will then take a short walk to the Garden of the Good Shepherd and Open Face Bible to learn how it started in 1965. From there, the group will visit the final resting places of Sadie Swanbum, a former county treasurer who was active in community affairs; Robert Chandler, a veteran who also was active in the community; Glenn “Fizz” Ehrler of Sycamore car show fame; and Bertha and Ralph Joiner, who saved so many old county records the Joiner History Room was named for them.

After the walk, participants can see other parts of the cemetery.

The talks will be presented by junior docents, as well as members of the museum and the community, all of whom volunteer their services.

“We have some talented volunteers,” Donahoe said. “I think it’s a great program. We’ve been doing it for so many years. It’s one of our most popular events.”

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