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Geer Cemetery (1876–1939), is an African-American cemetery located on Colonial Street between McGill Place and Camden Avenue in northeast Durham, North Carolina. It has also been known as City Cemetery, Old City Cemetery, East Durham Cemetery, and Mason Cemetery.


History

It currently occupies about , and contains the graves of over 1,500 African Americans, many born into slavery. It was the first cemetery for African Americans in Durham, and from 1876, when it opened, to 1924 it was the only one. In 1939 it was closed as overcrowded by the health department, although there was a burial in 1944. The city of Durham lists ownership of the cemetery as "Unknown". In 2004 the cemetery was "heavily overgrown and...nearly invisible"; it was impossible to walk through it. The city, in collaboration with Friends of Geer, a volunteer group, and Keep Durham Beautiful Inc., has cleared the site of trees, litter, and debris, suppressed vine and weed growth, restored tilted and fallen headstones, and smoothed a gravel road through the cemetery. A stone sign was erected on Camden Street. In 2015, the 150th anniversary of North Carolina's ratification of the Thirteenth Amendment, the Friends of Geer Cemetery held an event at the cemetery. Since at least 2020, the Friends of Geer Cemetery have partnered with faculty at Duke University, particularly Professor Adam Rosenblatt, to research the history of the cemetery and the people buried there.


Notable burials

* Edian Markham, founder of St. Joseph's African Methodist Episcopal Church * Margaret Ruffin Faucette, founder of Durham's
White Rock Baptist Church White Rock Baptist Church is a historically African American church that was founded in Durham, North Carolina, in 1866. The congregation first met in the home of Margaret Ruffin Faucette in Durham's Hayti neighborhood. The Reverends Zuck Horton ...
* Augustus Shepard, father of James E. Shepard, founder of
North Carolina Central University North Carolina Central University (NCCU or NC Central) is a public historically black university in Durham, North Carolina. Founded by James E. Shepard in affiliation with the Chautauqua movement in 1909, it was supported by private funds from b ...


References


External links


Friends of Geer Cemetery



Another list of burials in Geer Cemetery (not identical with preceding)
{{Coord, 36.0103, -78.8839, display=title African-American history in Durham, North Carolina Cemeteries in North Carolina History of Durham, North Carolina Tourist attractions in Durham, North Carolina African-American cemeteries in North Carolina