This grave is on the National Register of Historic
Places, and is visited by 20,000-30,000 people annually. It has been featured
in "Life", "Newsweek", and "People" magazines,
and as well as on the "Ripley's Believe It or Not" television show.
Davis Memorial
Mount Hope Cemetery Hiawatha, Kansas
![Davis Memorial Davis Memorial](https://www.cityofhiawatha.org/images/davis1.jpg)
![davismemorial03.jpg](https://www.cityofhiawatha.org/images/davismemorial03.jpg/image_mini)
![davismemorial04.jpg](https://www.cityofhiawatha.org/images/davismemorial04.jpg/image_mini)
![davismemorial06.jpg](https://www.cityofhiawatha.org/images/davismemorial06.jpg/image_mini)
![davismemorial08.jpg](https://www.cityofhiawatha.org/images/davismemorial08.jpg/image_mini)
As the memorial grew, so did the dismay of townspeople. Hiawatha was without a hospital and swimming pool. Community leaders wanted Davis to underwrite these projects -- and they told him so. He ignored their requests.
![davismemorial09.jpg](https://www.cityofhiawatha.org/images/davismemorial09.jpg/image_mini)
The eccentric Davis continued to watch over his memorial into the 1940s. He had a marble and granite wall erected to discourage visitors from walking among the statues. He visited the memorial weekly and sometimes personally greeted tourists.
Through it all, Davis never wavered in voicing devotion to his Sarah, though others were skeptical. Nor did he and townspeople ever come to terms about his decision to sink money into the memorial instead of investing in the town. What is not as widely known is that he secretly gave away tens or thousands of dollars to the needy, a few hundred dollars at a time.
Davis died in 1947 and was buried next to his wife under the marble canopy. The funeral was poorly attended and the Baptist minister conducting the service gently scolded Davis' fellow citizens for not accepting the memorial-builder as he was. Said the pastor in defense of John Davis: "All of us have peculiarities."
Today an air of mystery hangs over the memorial, sort of a second canopy of skepticism and resentment.
Some of his peers insist that Davis never treated his wife as royally in life as he did in death. They suspect his generous gift was intended more as a slap in the face to his wife's heirs than it was a tribute to Sarah. And resentment lingers over Davis' refusal to be a benefactor to Hiawatha in its hour of need.
Yet the irony is that the Davis Memorial has benefited the community. Every year tens of thousands of visitors come to Mt. Hope Cemetery to view the marble statuary and to hear the story of the memorial's eccentric creator. Built in memory of Sarah, the imposing work has become an enduring public attraction.
The Davis Memorial is today a piece of history -- and of mystery. Hiawatha knows whodunit: John Milburn Davis. The question remains...why?
The above posted by the City of Hiawatha
Angel with Sarah's face at foot of John's grave. The head
was stollen from the satatue at the foot of Sarah's grave.
"Kindly keep off the Memorial"
Davis Memorial guest register
Mount Hope Cemetery Map
Kansas Attractions Kansas Travel & Tourism Home
No comments:
Post a Comment