Unpublished Letter to Lowell Sun

In honor of Thanksgiving, the following letter was submitted to the Lowell Sun but was not published.

Letter to the Editor:

The origins of Thanksgiving in the United States are historically traced back to the time of the Pilgrims in Plymouth Colony. Today we celebrate Thanksgiving each November and much mythology has arisen around our national holiday. Today we celebrate with turkey, stuffing, and football. Many of our customs could not even have been imagined by the early settlers back in 1621. However, something that has remained the same for them and us is the fact that we take time on Thanksgiving to reflect on what we have and how thankful we are for it. Thanksgiving also provides us a time during which we can reflect on those who came before us to help establish our nation and on a more local level, our own community. Without their endeavors our community may not be as we know it today.

The Pilgrims celebrated the first Thanksgiving in 1621 and as time passed during the 17th century, more and more settlers arrived in Massachusetts Bay and made New England their home. The first settler to permanently settle in Dracut was Edward Coburn and Dracut became a town in 1701.

However, today, over three centuries after Edward Coburn and the other settlers of Dracut established a town, very few, if any, are aware that they are passing by one of the earliest vestiges of Dracut history as they drive along the Boulevard in Lowell. Located between the Brunswick Bowling Alley and Varnum Avenue is an abandoned, wooded lot. However, this is unlike other lots along the Boulevard. Here some of Dracut’s earliest and most prominent citizens lay interred. This is the site of the Claypit Cemetery.

Claypit is Dracut’s oldest cemetery. The area in which Claypit is located was once part of Dracut. The area today is called Pawtucketville and it was part of Dracut until it was annexed by the city Lowell in 1874. Over the years, Claypit has gone by other names such as the Old Burying Ground and the Pierce/Coburn Cemetery. Originally, it most likely was once a private cemetery for the Coburn family. Several Coburns are buried there. However, as time passed it began to be used as a neighborhood burial ground since other Pawtucketville families are known to have been buried there.

Surprisingly, for such an important historical site in town history, the cemetery has been neglected for most of the last 130 years. As early as 1880, there is evidence that Claypit was already falling into neglect and disrepair. The remains of Rev. Thomas Parker were moved to Woodbine Cemetery on West Meadow Road due to the poor conditions at Claypit. Rev. Parker had been buried there in 1765 and was moved in 1880.

It is unclear as to the reason for the neglect of Claypit at such an early date. No source has been discovered that would provide any clues as to why the earliest burial site in Dracut was already falling into disrepair by 1880. There is also no indication as to why Parker would be moved to Woodbine rather than care for, and preserve, his original resting place at Claypit. However, it could be conjectured that perhaps Woodbine was thought to be a more worthy internment site for the minister. Several renowned Dracut citizens are interred at Woodbine among them being Colonel Louis Ansart.

Claypit evidently continued to be neglected. In 1904, P. Hildreth Parker visited the site and compiled a list of the epitaphs she found on the headstones. According to the epitaphs she recorded in her journal, there were seventeen still remaining. If there had been others we do not know. This appears to be the earliest recording of the headstones found at Claypit

It was not until 1981-1982, that a serious effort was afoot to restore and preserve Dracut’s oldest burying ground. The effort to restore the site was spurred by Dracut High teacher, Donat Paquet, when he began researching his book, The Photographic History of Dracut. When Paquet and his assistant, photographer Peter Bell, first went to Claypit to photograph it for the book, they described the site as a “real jungle” and that it took two hours for them to clear an area in order to simply photograph two headstones. The “real jungle” was so thick, according to Paquet, that Bell needed a flash so the pictures would come out clearly. Besides the brush and growth, they did manage to find some granite posts, a few intact headstones, and several broken headstones. The condition of Claypit evidently bothered Paquet because the following year he and six seniors from Dracut High School returned to the site and cleared out the brush and debris. They salvaged some rusted chains from the Pierce plot.

After Paquet’s efforts, another ten years passed before any serious interest was shown in Claypit. In 1992, the Pawtucketville Historical Society’s Alan Manoian began an effort to learn the site’s history and educate the neighborhood of its historical importance. This resurgence in interest in Claypit was due to a serious act of vandalism by some teenagers in December 1991. Apparently, they thought there was a possibility of finding some artifacts of value and opened Aaron Coburn’s grave. According to Manoian, the Society had known about Claypit for years but intentionally left it alone so not to attract attention to it. They were trying to avoid vandalism to the site. Apparently, this plan failed since it was indeed vandalized in December 1991.

Claypit at this time was overgrown once again and there was much debris in the area. This debris included car axles. There were less than twelve headstones left and with the help of the Dracut Cemetery Department the site was cleared up. However, after the cleanup of the site, Claypit was, like so many times before, left alone. No provisions were made to maintain the site.

Over the past several months, I have spent numerous hours researching this historically significant, colonial cemetery along with the aid of students and colleagues. The Boston Globe and The Valley Dispatch have both published articles about the research we have done. In addition, our work can be accessed online at primaryresearch.org.

The town of Dracut continuously denies they are responsible for maintaining this cemetery; a position they have maintained for years and a position which has allowed the site to fall into the embarrassing and disgraceful condition in which it now lies. I would be willing, along with the others who have researched Claypit, to help Dracut officials properly restore this site as historically accurate as possible and create a feasible plan for the proper maintenance of this cemetery.

However, Dracut officials have demonstrated a lack of vision and leadership in honoring those at Claypit. I seriously doubt this will change in the near future. Perhaps it is time for the City of Lowell to step forward and do what Dracut has been unwilling to do for so long—restore and preserve a piece of history for the future.

Rebecca Duda

Teacher

Lakeview JHS

Dracut