Haiti
Cemetery
(page 1 of 2)
Haiti Cemetery was one of the
earliest burying grounds in Rockville. It opened in the 1880s when
an heir of Samuel Martin sold burial sites to local families on an
unused portion of the garden behind her house.
Martin's Lane was the dividing line
between Margaret Beall's property to the south and Samuel Martin's
to the north. Miss Beall, who lived in the Beall-Dawson house on
Montgomery Avenue, sold land (often with existing houses) to several
former slaves; members of these families continued to work for Beall
and Dawson heirs well into the 20th century.
Samuel Martin was born a slave near
Rockville about 1800. When he died in 1873, he left considerable
fortune and property, as well as the respect of those who knew him.
His children divided up the farm north of Martin's Lane,
constructing houses as each generation necessitated.
In the division of her grandfather's
estate, Charlotte Penny received the westemmost lot on "the
lane leading from the Frederick Road to the farm of John T. Vinson,"
(now Martin's Lane), identified in his 1873 will as Lot No. 1 on the
plat. Martin had divided this 8 3/4 acre portion of his property
into five lots of 1 3/4 acres each. Charlotte Penny, "of
Washington City in the District of Columbia," took title to her
portion in August 1883.
Following land exchanges with her
brother, Thomas P. Martin, Charlotte Penny sold the unimproved
parcel four years later to her sister, Agatha P. Smith. The Smiths
probably constructed a home on this property soon after, for they
mortgaged it in 1890 in order to secure a $500 loan. The loan was
made by the Home Mutual Building Association of Montgomery County to
the Trustees "who want to erect a new house of divine worship
"...for use and occupation of the African Methodist Episcopal
Zion Church of Rockville" (which became Clinton A.M.E. Zion
Church).
The Smiths began making their land
available for burials in the early 1880s, for the earliest readable
stone-that of Charlotte Penny-is dated 1889. In 1906, Eliza and
George Patterson purchased "150 square feet, more or less,
being a burial lot in the private cemetery of Smith and wife."
Eliza Douglas bought 110 square feet in 1908, "and the same lot
wherein the late Liz Douglas is now buried, including one more foot
of land in the Walk Way the length of the said lot facing thereon.
And the said Agatha Smith covenants to warrant generally the land
herein conveyed."
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