Tag Archives: death

A Tale of Three Cemeteries

All smaller, older cemeteries in the Port Orchard, Washington and surrounding area.

  • Bethel Cemetery
  • Sedgwick Cemetery
  • Colby Cemetery

The Bethel Cemetery is located 3 miles south of Port Orchard, Washington. The cemetery is located on the corner of Lider Road SE and Bethel Avenue and is behind the Grace Bible Church.

Driving Directions:  To get to the cemetery one should leave Highway 16 at the Sedgwick/Southworth exit driving east. At the Sedgwick and Bethel intersection, turn Right and travel on Bethel over the crossover of Hwy 16 just past the Bethel Towing Co. Crossing the overpass will have you facing Grace Bible Church.

 

 

 

 

The Sedgwick Cemetery is located on the outskirts of Port Orchard on Sedgwick Road.

Driving Directions:  From SR 16  take the Sedgwick Exit.  Turn right onto SR-160 (SE Sedgwick Road).  Stay on Sedgwick Rd for approximately 5.5 miles.  Cemetery will be on your right hand side. 
Sedgwick Cemetery was founded by the Ladies of G.A.R. General John Sedgwick Circle of Harper and Colby.  This cemetery was named in honor of General John Sedgwick, a Civil War Officer.   In the year 1905, a group of women, wives, daughters, and nieces of Civil War Veterans, organized the General Sedgwick Circle, No. 28, Ladies of the G.A.R., Women’s Auxiliary of the Grand Army of the Republic.  The charter members were Miriam Grant, Annie Cox, Mrs. Premo, Rosa Carr, Eva Peterson, Alice Kenney, Mrs. Ford Kenney, Juaquina Higgins, Annie Malone and Mrs. Myron Mix, all residents of Harper and Colby.  The Circle at once adopted a project, namely, a suitable burial place for the future use of veterans and their families.  Two acres of land, level and uncleared were bought from Major Carr of Harper.  In 1910, the little cemetery had been surveyed and platted.  Driveways and alleys were laid out and a formal dedication was made to the public.  Records have been faithfully kept and their pages show the names of many pioneers, women and men, who, by their industry and integrity, have helped to bring Kitsap County to its fine level of today.

The Colby (South Colby) Cemetery is located at the crossroad of SE Mile Hill Drive and Alaska Street SE in Colby (outskirts of Port Orchard), Kitsap Co., Wash.This small cemetery is in a wooded area and is on a slight hill, with a narrow dirt road leading up to it. The cemetery appears overgrown and unkept.

 

Old Abandoned Olalla Cemetery ~Starvation Heights~

Olalla Old Abandoned Cemetery

Olalla Cemetery, Kitsap County, Washington

The Olalla Cemetery, located on the Gig Harbor Peninsula just over the Pierce County Line in Kitsap County, sits high on a hill overlooking a small inlet in Puget Sound.   It was established, according to early records, at a meeting of the electors of School District 17 on 2 Feb 1901, and consists of one and one-half acres. The cemetery was abandoned in 1930 and there have been no burials in it since that date.  It is a pioneer cemetery, overgrown and seemingly forgotten, with many stones tipped and broken or completely lost.   Amongst the tilting headstones are pipe markers topped with red paint.

It is said  this  is the cemetery where the victims of Starvation Heights are laid to rest.   It is also said that the markers represent where headstones of the victims used to be, but popularity and/or vandalism  compelled them to replace the stones with the poles.  I have seen nothing to confirm that story, however.  There are a lot of these markers and are very difficult to count because the cemetery is laid out in such a rambling manner.  Overgrowth was also a factor and I stopped counting when I got to 40.

The old Olalla cemetery has a fascinating past.  I read the book Starvation Heights when I first moved to the area and have wanted to go explore this particular area since.

Story of Starvation Heights and Linda Hazzard

The Book Starvation Heights

Because of the tragic nature of the story, many people believe this cemetery is haunted and it is listed on several paranormal sites.

I found it nothing but peaceful.  It is not far from the road  (150 yards  or so) so you can hear the occasional car going by but the setting of the cemetery itself is quite tranquil.  I saw a previous youtube video from 2011 that was slightly different from my photos and video.  We had a recent windstorm earlier this year 2014 and it completely uprooted one of the larger  trees which in turn lifted a burial sites/marker and narrowly missed a few others.

The site of Dr. Hazzard’s home is not far from the cemetery.  The hospital and surrounding buildings have been torn down, unfortunately.  I find it almost criminal when such fascinating pieces of history are deliberately destroyed.    There are people who live in the home but they do not want to be bothered and it took me about 15 minutes (and I have years of online investigative experience) before I found the address.

The cemetery is public.  But boy howdy, they don’t make it easy to find.  Several websites have misleading directions.  In the interests of accuracy I will be providing accurate directions along with pictures of the entrance.  If you are the type of person who is going to be vandalizing a cemetery, this is one of these few occasions that I hope the cemetery is indeed haunted and the ghosties will take a bite out  of your disrespectful derriere if you try to disturb the peace.  Honor the past, folks.  It is the right thing to do.

Here is a map.  The trail is right off Olalla Valley Road.  If you are meandering around Orchard Avenue you are in the wrong place.  Also, if you hit Al’s Market and the bridge that goes over the inlet you have gone too far.

olalla cemetery directions

13172 olalla valley road cemetery
Right here is the entrance. There are two concrete poles with cabling, the pole closest in this picture is hidden in the brush.
phone pole
Pole 7 – 046642
entrance to trail
Concrete pole entrance to trail.
hidden entrance pole
Hidden Entrance Pole
across the street
Almost right straight across from the entrance to the trail. This is a fenced dilapidated old house set a bit back from the road.

You will hike up 150-200 feet in an upward SE direction before arriving at the cemetery.

trail
Trail on November 15, 2014
bridge on trail
Little wooden bridge on the trail

Headstones

Peaceful Ambient Scenes from the Cemetery

1907906_10205056435231569_7224127109974658842_n
Chantilly Leaf Lace
cairns and stump
Winter Cairns and Stump
scene
Olalla Cemetery in Falling Leaves
mushroom
Mushroom on Moss
Opaque Leaves
Opaque Leaves