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When Tom and Elaine Freeman of
Lewiston don their gardening gloves and begin the pruning,
raking and weeding that is characteristic of the care they give
their own yard, they are acting out of a sense of commitment
and pride they feel for Mount Hope Cemetery.
“I think we care for the cemetery because my
grandparents, great-aunt, parents, aunt, uncle and niece are buried
here along with Tom’s mother, father, and brother," Elaine says. "We think of Mount
Hope Cemetery as a little gem.”
The stone at the entrance on Mt. Hope Ave. off River Road PCHsays the
cemetery was established in 1860. It serves as the final
resting place for many ethnic groups who have had a legacy in
building the city of Lewiston. The tombstones record the Irish,
Italian and French names familiar to the city’s history.
The Freemans collaborated
with volunteers to remove severely overgrown arborvitaes, which had
grown to a height of 25 feet, from the monument area and at the
main entrance. “We have sort of adopted two spots at the cemetery
that we take care of. All new perennials were planted after the
removal of the old, overgrown arborvitaes and there are new plants
(near) the gate as you enter.”
They have found some unusual things at the cemetery: a hummingbird
feeder in the shape of a wine bottle on a shepherd’s crook, a shot glass placed next to a full bottle of beer and a 6-inch
Adirondack chair with a miniature, black leather Harley-Davidson
jacket and a set of chaps sitting neatly on the chair.
The work of
keeping the cemetery beautiful and welcoming to people who want to
come and pay respects to the departed is a labor of love that the
Freemans feel connects them to their own ancestors and gives them
purpose in keeping the hope in Mount Hope.