Cemeteries
The Washington Township
Board of Trustees oversees the maintenance of
six cemeteries in the Township. These include
the Centerville-Washington Township Cemetery (also
called the "Centerville Cemetery"),
which can be entered from an extension of East
Ridgeway Avenue; The Sugar Creek Baptist Church
Cemetery (also called the "Old Centerville
Cemetery") with an entrance off North Main
Street north of Giovanni's Restaurant; Woodbourne
Cemetery on West Whipp Road on the northwest corner
of Paddington Road; Washington Presbyterian Church
Cemetery on Route 725 at Southwind Drive; Rehoboth
Methodist Church Cemetery, on the west side of
State Route 48 near the Warren County line; and
the Sugar Creek Friends Meeting House Cemetery
on the west side of Clyo at Olde Quaker Court.
There are a couple of private
family burial grounds in the Township, plus
the Hopewell Methodist Church Cemetery on East
Spring Valley Road at Deep Forest Lane. The
graves in the Hopewell burial ground were identified
only with creek stones. When the area was platted
for a real estate development, the stones were
removed and the graves covered over.
The Centerville Cemetery (New
Centerville Cemetery), authorized by Township
Officials in 1867, is the only active burial
ground and the only one without a church affiliation.
The earliest burials in the Township were in
the Sugar Creek Baptist Church Cemetery. Scroll
down for more information on the history of
the cemeteries.
The cemetery office is located
at the Centerville Cemetery off of Maple Avenue,
just south of Irongate Apartments. Hours are
Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. You can
email
questions or comments directly to cemetery sexton
Tony Stephens, or call his office at 433-0150.
Please do not call for historical information.
Most cemetery records contain only a name, year
of birth and year of death.
Fact: There are over
2,300 gravesites on 10 acres in the Centerville
Cemetery.
Current Cemetery Fee Schedule
The purchase price of a grave is $600.00
Opening
and Closing Fees:
| |
Monday thru Friday |
Saturday |
| Full Grave (adult) |
$550 |
$650 |
| Half Grave (baby) |
$150 |
$200 |
| Ashes |
$150 |
$200 |
Historical
Briefs of the Cemeteries
Sugar Creek
Baptist Church Cemetery (Northeast of Bill's
Donut Shop)
The first recorded
meeting of the Sugar Creek Baptists (now
Centerville Baptist Church) was November
2, 1799. In 1802, property was purchased from Aaron
Nutt and by 1803 a meeting house was erected on the west side
of the cemetery. Early residents traveled to the church on
trails which were blazed through the wilderness
from settlements five miles away. On July
4, 1807, the church trustees appointed Benjamin
Robbins and Whitely Hatfield "to lay off
a burial ground in proper manner." Additions
to the cemetery continued until 1868, which
extended the cemetery to its present boundaries.
Many early settlers, including veterans
of the Revolutionary and other wars, are
interred there. |
Woodbourne Cemetery (Whipp
at Paddington)
In 1823 Richard Wheatley
elected to bury his son Richard in lot 16
of the industrial town of Woodbourne, thereby
establishing a town burial ground. Others
were buried there before the Christian Church
was built on lot 11 in 1846. This Church
then associated itself with the cemetery.
With the decline of the town the church
was abandoned and eventually torn down in
1939. The last interment in the cemetery
was in 1891. There are nine markers for
15 known burials, but many more are believed
to be buried there. |
Washington Presbyterian
Church Cemetery
Encouraged by Edmund
and Johnathan Munger, the church congregation
met for the first time on November 29, 1813.
Services were held in the larger of Munger's
two barns until a quaint brick church was
built in 1830 on two acres purchased by
Johnathan Munger for $35. The church sat
between the cemetery and Miamisburg-Centerville
Road at the corner of what is now Southwind
Drive (formerly Washington Church Road).
The church was abandoned in 1928 and razed
by the State of Ohio in 1971. There are
89 graves including that of Revolutionary
War General William Dodds. The earliest
grave is dated 1830 and the last 1898. |
Rehoboth Methodist
Church Cemetery (NE end of Penfield Rd.)
The members of this
church first met in 1809 in the home of
Henry Opdyke on the Alexandersville-Bellbrook
Pike near the Greene County line. In 1816,
the members built a small brick church in
front of the cemetery that faced State Route
48. The church was abandoned and torn down
many years ago when the congregation joined
with the United Methodist Church of Centerville.
The cemetery contains 51 known graves dated
between 1821 and 1879. |
Sugar Creek
Friends Cemetery (Clyo s. of Quaker Way)
After attending monthly
meetings in Waynesville and Springboro for
many years, members of the Society of Friends
built a log meeting facing Clyo Road on
two acres of land purchased from Soloman
Miller in 1823. Abandoned as a church in
1858 when most of the members moved out
of the Township, the structure was converted
to a house only to be consumed by fire soon
after. The cemetery contains nine markers
for eleven members of three families, but
Quaker records show more than that. The
cemetery was deeded to the Township in 1979.
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