Cemetery Chronicles: Clarke, Dudley pioneer weather monitoring in this area

“Climate is what we expect.  Weather is what we get.”  Mark Twain

Born in 1857 Frederick H. Clarke was one of three children born to Ephraim and Mariam Clarke of Fairfax County, Virginia.  Educated in the schools of Washington D.C., by the age of 14 Clarke worked in the Washington insurance office of Taylor, Smith, and Thomas.  

In 1879 at the age of 22, fair-haired, brown-eyed Clarke enlisted in the United States Army and was assigned to the Signal Corp.  This assignment sent Clarke to Fort St. Michael in Sitka, Alaska, where his duties were to monitor the weather. 

Since Clarke’s time in Alaska was before the Klondike Gold Rush that generated an increase in population from the mainland United States, Clarke was one of the few non-indigenous people living in the region.  He remained with the Signal Corp for the next 12 years.

The final resting place of Frederick H. Clarke in Block Seven at the Dunmore Cemetery,                              

In 1889, Clarke assumed charge of the weather bureau office in Little Rock, Arkansas, and he remained in that position until 1898.  He was then transferred to the weather office in Binghamton, New York.  

During his time in Binghamton, Clarke befriended a local Domestic Science teacher, Caroline T. Brown who taught at Binghamton’s Barlow Institute.  Evidence suggests that the relationship between Clarke and Brown may have been romantic in nature but for reasons known only to them, the relationship ended. In 1901 Clarke transferred to Scranton. 

Once in Scranton, Clarke resided at 306 Wyoming Avenue. He observed, forecasted, and chronicled weather from his office in the Connell Building until the end of May, 1904. At that time Clarke was stricken with Bright’s Disease and suffered from cardiac problems. He died in his apartment on June 8, 1904.  In his will filed in Binghamton, New York, in October 1900, Clarke left all his personal effects, including a typewriter, bicycle, and a small cash sum to Caroline T. Brown. 

At the time of his death The Tribune noted that “Clarke was simply untiring.  He would work 18 out of 24 hours a day and could be seen at almost any hour of the night standing in his window watching the heavens.”  Clarke now rests peacefully, under the heavens, in Section Seven of the Dunmore Cemetery. 

Final resting place of William M. Dudley, in the Burr Mausoleum in Block Twenty, of the Dunmore Cemetery

Following Clarke’s death his position was filled by William McMillan Dudley. Dudley had ties to Scranton, having married Green Ridge resident Emma Burr in July 1909. At the time of his transfer from Mobile, Alabama, to Scranton, Dudley had been in the employ of the Department of Agriculture monitoring the weather for 14 years. He remained in the position as head of the weather bureau in Scranton for 21 years.

Like his predecessor, Dudley succumbed to kidney ailments on June 1, 1925. He was 53 years old.  Dudley was laid to rest in the Burr mausoleum on Block Twenty in the Dunmore Cemetery. 

Dearly Departed Players decorate cemetery for Memorial Day

The Dearly Departed Players recently decorated the Dunmore Cemetery for the Memorial Day holiday. 

This season the Players took the cemetery Receiving Vault under their wing by decorating it with patriotic banners, wind spinners, flags and flowers. Director of the Dearly Departed Players, Julie Esty, noted that the organization has been asked by visitors who frequent the cemetery to decorate for holidays other than their seasonal decor in October for the annual Dunmore Cemetery Tour. 

The Players are trying to comply and have received a good response whenever they decorate the Receiving Vault.  Esty also noted that the cemetery is a very community friendly place, drawing visitors of all ages daily.  The decorations seem to make people happy.

The Players were also at the cemetery on Memorial Day distributing handmade poppy pins to the public.  Each pin has the name and information about a soldier buried in the cemetery who was killed in the line of duty in the World Wars.

Dearly Departed Players present: “Accidents Happen”

 

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The Dearly Departed Players, under the direction of Julie Esty,will present The Dunmore Cemetery Tour, 2016, “Accident’s Happen,”  on Sundays Oct. 2 and 9 at 2 p.m. Admission is free. Tours begin at the Cemetery Gate and run approximately two hours.

Comfortable walking shoes are suggested. Arrive early to view the exhibits before the tour. For tour infrmation, please call 570-344-3819.  The Dunmore Cemetery Tour can be found on Facebook.

dearly-departed-players-pic2This annual event draws audience attendees from all over the East Coast. Last year, well over 1,500 people attended over two Sundays. In  2014 and 2015, the tour was voted  Happenings Magazine Best History Centered Event.  The Dearly Departed Players are a group of 14 Lackawanna County residents.  Among the group are historical interpreters, authors, professional actors, dancers and musicians.

Last year’s tour, “Criminal Intent,” was a huge success.  In keeping with a themed tour, this year everyone from the past who is presented either died by accident or caused an accident that resulted in death.  

One aspect of the Dunmore Cemetery Tour that makes it unique is that, in addition to being an event dealing with local history, it is also theatrical, incorporating aspects of site specific, promenade and environmental theater into the production.