MIDDLETOWN — For the last five years, the Middletown Cemetery Board has raised more than $100,000 to save the vault, restore broken headstones, install an electronic entry gate, and add a concrete patio in front of the vault, doors and roof framing.
Ed and Judy Bayless of Bayless Roofing recently installed the cupola they fabricated on the new slate roof, said Deb Morrison, board chairman.
Morrison said the Cemetery Board isn't finished with the vault, and at some point in the next five years, hopes to start another fund-raising campaign that will finish the inside of the vault that will be used for a learning center and museum for the history of Middletown and the people buried in the cemetery on First Avenue. Some founding fathers and well-known residents are laid to rest in the Middletown Cemetery, Morrison said.
Former Middletown City Manager Judy Gilleland and City Council created the Middletown Cemetery Board five years ago, Morrison said. The vault, built sometime in the 1880s, needed to be demolished and was deemed unsafe, Gilleland said. She challenged the board to raise the funds to fix the vault.
The board started a “Save the Historic Middletown Cemetery Vault” campaign. Morrison said quotes for the repairs were received, and the estimated cost to repair the stone work was $42,000. Morrison said Martha W. Newton, one of the Middletown Cemetery's biggest supporters, and one who had family laid to rest there, passed away. She bequeathed a large sum of money that saved the vault, Morrison said.
Besides money from the Newton estate, the board received grants and personal donations, and financial assistance from the Middletown Community Foundation, Miriam Knoll Foundation, W.E. Smith Family Foundation, IAM Local Lodge 1943, SunCoke Energy, local funeral homes, and the Walmart Foundation and the City of Middletown contributed the final funds to finish the vault roof at a cost of nearly $27,000.