35 North 5th Street,
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, 63670
Sainte Genevieve Memorial Cemetery – Missouri’s Oldest Cemetery Most historic cemeteries offer orderly rows of weathered headstones, carefully maintained grounds, and clear boundaries separating the living from the dead. Memorial Cemetery operates differently. This is a 5th and Merchant Streets hillside where more than 3,500 people—perhaps up to 5,000—lie in graves that are mostly unmarked, their wooden crosses having rotted away over the 235+ years since the cemetery’s establishment in 1787. The oldest marked grave belongs to Louis Le Clere (dated 1796, though burials certainly occurred earlier), and remarkably, burials continued 15 years after the official 1882 closure when the cemetery had become so crowded and weedy that it posed a health hazard. This is where Missouri’s territorial representative John Scott rests alongside French commandant Jean Baptiste Vallé, where Revolutionary War soldier Jacques Misse sleeps near Civil War Colonel killed at Shiloh, where enslaved people lie in their enslavers’ plots while free African Americans and Native Americans occupy the uphill section, and where Senator Lewis Linn was buried three times—the third interment occurring in 1938 when his nearly 100-year-old corpse was found remarkably preserved in its air-tight, lead-lined coffin, and people lined up to view his face through the window Read more…


