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LIME KILN BURIAL GROUND
LIME KILN LOCATION & MAP
BURIED
AT LIME KILN
EARLY SPRING 2001
REFERENCES
MAP OF THE HEADSTONES IN THE LIME KILN BG
INDEX OF THE HEADSTONES
FOR INFORMATION
LIME KILN BURIAL GROUND
Creek Road, Bethlehem, PA, in the Saucon Valley, near
Hellertown
In use as a burying ground by
the Pioneer Settlers prior to the Revolutionary War of 1775
The cemetery located on Creek Road is made up of two adjacent
lots. The first lot consisting of 64 perches in the northwest
corner, was part of the mill land of Jacob Kram of Lower Saucon
Township. The heirs of Jacob Kram along with his wife Barbara,
granted this tract of land to Samuel Kauffman, on behalf of the
Mennonite Society and to Samuel Rothrock, on behalf of the German
Baptist Society. The date of the unrecorded deed is April 1,
1802. Jacob Kram died on April 22, 1798 and is buried in the Lime
Kiln Cemetery.
The second lot of 48 perches was granted to the above mentioned
agents on behalf of the Mennonite and Baptist Societies by Isaac
Rothrock and his wife Cathrout of Lower Saucon Township. Their
deed is dated April 26, 1802.
According to the History of the
Church Of The Brethren, published in 1915, this burial
ground was in existence and occupied for many years before the
death of Jacob Kram in 1798.
The Kram deed states that the 64 perches "being intended by
lawful Conveyance to give grant and Confirm unto the menoist and
Baptice Societice for to Build a house theron for Keeping School
and Buplic worship therin and also for a graveyard for the Said
Societice and Neighbours which will choose to burying their Deat
(which Diet a Christian Death) therein and to hold a Burial
Serman in the Said School House."

The Rothrock deed states the land is
"for a Grave Yard or Burying Ground to inter their Dead
in,which thy further agree shall be free to all other Persuasions
of People to inter their Dead in who Die a natural Death. And
also for the further purpose of Building a House on part of the
said land to answer to the purposesof a Meeting and school house,
which shall be free to all people in these two capacities,to
which it shall be appropriated and shall be opened whenever
required, to preach the funeral sermon of any person who may be
intered in the said Burying Ground thereunto belonging
therein."
According to a History
of the Mennonites Franconia Conference, published in
1937, a stone in the Schoolhouse building states,
LIMEKILN SCHOOL HOUSE
Built 1802
Burned and Rebuilt 1854
Rebuilt 1891
The History of the Mennonities
states that "Preacher Samuel Bechtel(d.1802), preached at
Hellertown, while he lived nearby, from about 1750 until he moved
in 1764." This author states that it is entirely possible
that there was a meeting house the before the 1802 building.
The schoolhouse was converted into a house in 1954 and the above
mentioned stone is no longer evident.
The History of the Church Of The
Brethren published in 1915 describes the burying
ground:
"The first thing that strikes the visitor to this ancient
God's acre is the substantial character of the wall, and the
large amount of space the wall encloses. This size shows the
great importance of the place, to a large community in time past.
This large space of this city of the dead is probably fully
occupied. There are many small stones, and plenty of evidence of
many unmarked graves. There are some larger tombstones, and a few
newer ones, and of a more recent date, the cemetary itself being
much neglected, and littlecared for. Except for the size, one
might suppose the place to be the place to be of little
importance by its neglected appearance inside. But the size, and
the substantial enclosure are abundant proof that a community was
greatly interested in perpetrating what to-day is not visible.
This wall is the crystallized thought of a community, its visible
testimony to buried interests within. This walled cemetary is
about 100 feet square, and if the ground is fully occupied, as it
seems to be, about 400 people lie buried her."

The Lime Kiln Cemetery contains fifty-one headstones, some with
legible inscriptions, some unmarked, bearing the names of Derr,
Geissinger, Guth, Heller, Hillegas, Kauffman, Kram, Newkomer,
Riegel, Roth, Rothrock, Weber, Weinke,and Weinick. There are also
sixteen stone markers. Of the unmarked headstones, some are of
red shale. The earliest legible is in German and is a native
stone marked: Cartherine Rigelin,1771. The date date of the most
recent headstone that is legible is Sylvester Hillegas, born
Sept.18,1846, died Feb. 9, 1894.
This
burial ground contains the graves of the pioneer settlers who
made their home in the Valley of the Saucon. Hellertown is named
after the family of Johan Christoph Heller who, at the age of 50,
with his wife Veronica and their six surviving children, aged 17
yrs. to 3 yrs., left Pfeddershein, Grmany to emigrate to America.
They came to America on the ship Winter Galley, arriving in
Philadephia on Sept. 5, 1738, and settled in Lower Saucon
Township.
Dr. B.F. Fackenthal, Jr., who, in 1922,
documented the tombstones in the Lime Kiln Burial Ground, counted
18 headstones belonging to the Heller family. Johan Christoph
Heller,1689-1778, is buried in the Lime Kiln Burial Ground but
his grave is unmarked. Chrisop's 4th child Daniel and Daniel wife
Elizabth are buried here. Christop's 3rd child Johan
Michael,1724-1803,is thought to be buried here as well.The
Pennsylvania Archives,5th Series, Vol.8, includes Michael
Heller,Sr.,his sons Michael,Jr. and David Heller, Samuel Rothrock
and Bejamin Riegel, as having served in the Revolutionary War of
1775. These men are all buried in the in the Lime Kiln Burial
Ground.
Each year a few vistors from around the
United States make a stop here at the cemetery looking up their
ancestors. George Heller, a recent visitor from North Dakota, is
a great,great,great,great, great,grandson of Johan Christoph
Heller. He came looking for and found the grave of his ancestor
Magdalena Heller,1788-1812.
The name Lime Kiln is thought to derive from
the abundance of lime in this area and the lime kilns which were
in existence along the Saucon Creek many years ago.
The Menonist and Baptist Societies are not
known to exist in the area today.
The trustee for the Lime Kiln Burial Ground
is Calvin J.Boehm,Jr.,Friedensville Road, Bethlehem. Mr. Boehm
states he is a descendent of Philip Boehm, a pioneer settler to
Lower Saucon Township. The upkeep of the burial ground has been
in the care of his family for generations.
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