
|
When 14-year-old Charles
Farley died in Feb. 1878, his parents buried him
near their farmhouse, as this frontier locality
had no cemetery at the time. Three months later
Fannie Nichols (1875-78) died and was buried
nearby. The Farleys then donated an acre of land
as a community graveyard. The neighbors built an
adjacent brush arbor for funerals and general
gatherings. In the summer of 1878, Baptists
organized a church, naming it Amity (friendship).
Before erecting their own buildings, Baptists and
Methodists held services in the brush arbor or at
Amity School (1 mi. NW). William H. Lindley
(1840-1913) bought land south of the Farley Farm
in 1885. When new surveys placed the cemetery on
his land, Lindley deeded the burial ground to the
public. Later his son-in-law, George Brown, gave
an additional acre to be used if needed. A large
tabernacle with permanent fixtures replaced the
brush arbor and was used for funerals until 1938
or 1939, when it was severely damaged by a storm.
Free-will donations have maintained the cemetery
since 1951. A "First Sunday in June Singing" which
Amity Baptist Church originated in 1897 now serves
as an annual Memorial Day and homecoming. By 1978
Amity Cemetery has nearly 400 graves. (1978) |