...information on the deceased in St. Columba Cemetery at "Lake Five" and "Colgate," located in the Village of Richfield, Washington County, Wisconsin, USA.
"Show me the manner in which a Nation or Community cares for its dead and I will measure with mathematical exactness the tender mercies of its people, their respect for the laws of the land and their loyalty to high ideals."
Welcome... ...thanks for visiting... ...just "click" on the LETTER below to find the surname for your family member or friend (then "click" on the photo of the headstone to get a larger image).
Please note:
The material on this blog is available free for family research. Please credit this site.
Please contact this site at okeane.robert@gmail.com to use the material for other purposes.
Saint Columba Cemetery is located on the northwest corner of the intersection of "County Line Q" and "State Highway 164" (the former County Trunk "J") in the unincorporated village of Lake Five which lies within the Village of Richfield, Washington County, Wisconsin, USA.
Please contact us atokeane.robert@gmail.com to
1- provide additional information,
2- request additional information,
3- request the removal or correction of information.
Thank you for any help you can provide.
"Click" on the word "MAP" to see the approximate location of this cemetery on "Mapquest"
Headstones listed on this blog are given a "letter" and a "number" to identify their location on an "x-y axis" layout.
The cemetery has 11 rows of headstones, labelled "A" through "L." The rows run south-to-north, parallel to Highway 164. "Row A" is closest to Highway 164 (east) and "Row L" is farthest from Highway 164 (west), towards the Mobil gas station. The north and south fences have letter markers attached to designate row location.
Headstones are also given a number to identify their approximate location, in paces (steps), away from the south fence (along County Line Q).
Headstones are also given a specific and unique number. For example, the headstone for James and Katherine McCartan is "# 96" (the 96th headstone to be recorded in an east-to-west row progression with a south-to-north movement along each row). The headstone is also designated as "F-18," to aid in locating the headstone in "row F" (the sixth row in from Highway 164) and about 18 paces in from the south fence, along County Line Q.
Please note that many headstones in the "oldest" (south) section of the cemetery are missing, so there may be many open spaces along a row of headstones.
St. Columba Church
...circa 1972
Genealogical Research
The records on this blog are available free for your use in family research. Please credit this source.
Please contact us at okeane.robert@gmail.com for permission to use the material on this blog for other purposes.
As noted above, many headstones in the "oldest," south section of the cemetery are missing. Sadly, records to identify who is buried in those open spaces is not available from St. Gabriel Parish which is the church maintaining the cemetery, nor from the Milwaukee Roman Catholic Archdiocese.
The Milwaukee Archdiocese Archivist responded to enquiries in 2004 that they would respond to individual enquiries, as time allows, when you submit the name of a specific, deceased person, including as much additional information as possible. (See their website at http://www.archmil.org/ .)
Another resource is available through the Latter Day Saints (LDS) Library. See their website at http://www.familysearch.org/ to find the library nearest you. From that library, you can order microfilm # 1871065 that contains records for St. John, Monches and St. Columba, Lake Five. Death records are only included for the years 1898 to 1920, but there are records for Baptisms (1845-1855, 1856-1879, 1884-1920, 1884-1894), First Communions (1908-1920), Confirmations (1898-1916, 1919-1920) and Marriages (1845-1854, 1858-1894, 1885-1920, 1871-1891).
Abbreviations used: b. = born / date of birth Co. = County d. = died / date of death m. = married /date of marriage Milw. J/S = Milwaukee Journal Sentinel newspaper NCH comments: = information provided by Nancy (Collins) Henke (R.I.P.), local historian obit. = obituary / death notice VS comments: = information provided by Vincent Sennott (R.I.P.), lifelong parish member and local historian yrs. = years
Good luck with your efforts.
More Research Sources
Although St. John - "Monches" Roman Catholic Church does not provide research information for its former Mission Church---St. Columba, they have an interesting website that has cemetery listings for St. John's and nearby St. Clare's - "North Lake." The two parishes merged in 2006 and are now called St. Teresa of Calcutta. Go to www.blteresaparish.org/ and click on the "Our History" selection along the left side of the website to find more local history.
The Menomonee Falls Library at http://home.mf.lib.wi.us/ is another good source for local history information.
St. Columba Parish History
St. Columba Roman Catholic Church, Lake Five, was a mission of St. John Church, Monches, according to the book "The Story of Washington County," by Carl Quickert. Both parishes were established in 1842 by the Reverend Martin Kundig, a Roman Catholic priest. Initially, Father Morrisey, a "circuit-riding" priest, said Mass in the home of John Donnelly on the shores of Lake Five.
Among the first members of the congregation were the families of Matthew Cosgrove, Patrick Flynn, Edward McCartan, John Fleming, Martin Claffey, Michael & John Redmond, John Donnelly, William Dunn and Michael Denney.
The name of the church, "St. Columba," is likely to be a reflection of the Irish heritage of many of the church's early members. According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, "Saint Columba," also known as "Columcille," was one of the twelve leading churchmen in Ireland's history. He was born in County Donegal, Ireland, and was a statesman, scholar, poet and founder of numerous churches and monasteries.
The original church, built in the mid-1800's, was a log structure. The second building, "the little, white church," was built around 1901. The newer, Lannon Stone church was built in 1972.
In 2002, St. Columba merged with two area churches, St. Hubert-Hubertus and St. Mary-Richfield, under edict by the Milwaukee Catholic Archdiocese, to form a new church, St. Gabriel, which is located about two and one-half miles north of the cemetery, just off State Road 164.
St. Gabriel Parish maintains the three original cemeteries and can be contacted at www.stgabrielhubertus.org , 262-628-1141, or St. Gabriel Catholic Church, 1200 Saint Gabriel Way, Hubertus, WI 53033. Office hours are listed on their website as: Monday-Friday, 8:30am to 3pm.
Acknowledgements
Appreciation is extended to:
> my helpful wife, Susan,
> St. Gabriel Sextant, John Johnson,
> Gilbert Schmitt who volunteers to put flags at veterans' grave sites,
> local historians, Joe & Dorothy Becker, Nancy (Collins) Henke (R.I.P.) and Vincent Sennott (R.I.P.),
> local researcher and historian, John Von Haden and
> the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints Library and Research facilities.