A generous outpouring has pushed the Clark Lake Memory Fund over the top. Work can now proceed to restore broken, tipped over, or out of place headstones in the Clark Lake Cemetery. They will then be gently cleaned under the care of Jackson Monument. Jackson Monument is experienced and technically advanced in this kind of work. The cost estimate is $7,000. These individuals and families can be thanked for the generous donations.
DONORS
3000+
Chas & Pat Timberlake – Honoring Frances M. (Timberlake) Lillis (1950-2007) who spent many wonderful summers at Windward on Eagle Point
1000+
Walter Reed
500+
Joan Ambs
Rick Belcher – Honoring William & Julia Preece
John & Jackie Calhoun – Honoring John (Jack) & Maxine King
Mike & Teresa McKay
Raft-O-Rama
Bill & Ann Searles
250+
John, Dotty & Johnny Karkheck
150+
Nancy & Mike Ligibel
100+
Angela Anderson – Honoring Anderson-Willnow-Pierson Families
C. J. Cox – Honoring Monty R. Cox
Ronald & Sue Crawford
David & Sandy Gaunt – Honoring Crawford/Blanchard/Gaunt Family
Stacy Harrison
Delores Jackson – Honoring John I., Mary Fred, Hila, Tom, Mable, Jack Jackson
Ron & Beth June – Honoring Richard Moyer
Lauri & Steve Lambert
Chuck & Tina Newman – Honoring Woodie & Betty Newman
Carolyn Nichols – Honoring Kay Vermeulen Nichols
Terry & Cris Reed – Honoring Robert & Lila Jean Reed
Archie Sconochia
Andrea Steible
John & Elaine Stewart
Brenda Weidner – Honoring James & Hattie Crozier
Carolyn Zader – Honoring Edna Holzapfel
50+
Linda Z. Gregory – Honoring Charles & Martha Babcock
Linda Z. Gregory – Honoring David H. Gregory, Trelvs O. Gregory, Wright Gregory
Adam McKay
Viewing the names of honorees on this page will bring back recollections of those who have gone before us. The Clark Lake Memory plaque to be placed in the cemetery will bear the names of the donors.
Photo from Memorial Day 2024. A wreath was placed on the grave of a veteran as taps was played.
Beyond the project to restore and clean the markers, another level of care, reverence and relevance is under development. As the details are secured, look for the story about it, and how you may wish to participate.
Donations can be made via credit card by clicking here, or by mailing a check payable to the Clark Lake Spirit Foundation, PO Box 224, Clark Lake, MI 49234. The Foundation is a 501c3 and donations may be tax-advantaged, according to IRS rules.
If you’re hearing about Clark Lake Memory’s for the first time, you may wonder how it came to be. Some headstones have stood the test time. Many have not. Markers are tipped over, the stone or granite is encased with moss, dirt or otherwise discolored. That, in itself, is sad. Take the unhappy tour in this slide show.
Heartfelt concern has inspired donors:
Cemetery Is Part of Clark Lake
Clark Lakers regularly join together to create, improve, preserve or otherwise safeguard important aspects of the community – the Community Center, Pretty Pergola, Spirit Trail, Welcome to Clark Lake Sign, the new irrigation project around it, and DamStrong. Events like the Memorial Day Parade, Run Clark Lake, Raft-O-Rama, Polar Plunge, Clark Lake Cup, Crab Races, the beautifying work of the Garden Angels all testify to the outpouring of support. The cemetery is not going anywhere. Clark Lakers have joined together to address the conditions.
A past project was especially pertinent. Until two decades ago, cars routinely parked over graves near the front entrance when using the boat launch. The Foundation constructed the fencing and pillars that you see along the east gate. This project, in collaboration with the then township supervisor, was no small task. It started with the Foundation mapping the cemetery. That documentation the Township still uses today.
Clark Lake’s Memory
If you visit the cemetery, you may notice familiar names like Vermeulen, Adkins, Jackson, Anderson, and Reed. Look further and you find reminders of the area’s earliest settlers. George Stranahan, his son George Jr., and daughter Catherine, are buried here. Donors are showing respect to those who have gone before.
Saluting Veterans
Fifty-five veterans and spouses are buried in this cemetery. Their service includes the Civil War, World War I, World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. Every Memorial Day, the Parade stops at the cemetery to salute veterans by symbolically placing a wreath on one of the graves. In this photo, the kids in the parade and other participants are assembling at the cemetery.
Families
The families of those who are in the cemetery, or expect to use it, have a special reason for supporting Clark Lake’s Memory. Some of them regularly care for family headstones, and may have a strong interest in the cemetery’s preservation.
Strolling through the cemetery evokes a range of emotions – sweet remembrances, lingering grief, respect, sadness. Of those buried here, one common thread may be that each, and/or their families, rest at the lake they loved.
On a rainy day in March, these four gathered at the cemetery to develop a plan – Mike McKay (who led the Foundation’s cemetery restoration 19 years ago), John Karkheck (who inspired the project), Chris St. John (Jackson Monument), and Rick Belcher.
Once this project is completed, John Karkheck indicates Post 315 of the American Legion in Brooklyn will dedicate the work done on behalf of interred veterans. Further, it’s hoped that the Wreaths Across America program, honoring veterans, will include this cemetery.
For your reference, here is how the project will proceed under the care of Jackson Monument:
Step 1: Restore, level and plumb broken marble tablets, using Domo 10 epoxy and infill mortar as recommended by National Cemetery Preservation best practice. Repair or new socket type base may be necessary to ensure they stand upright. (One tablet is beyond repair – the marble is too degraded and it will have to lay on the ground).
Step 2: Straighten and level each family lot of markers. Remove built up soil from around each marker or monument. Search out each existing concrete foundation, level if necessary and re-install the marker to the foundation. Straighten each row of markers for the best curb appeal.
Step 3: Clean each memorial. Each stone will be washed using low pressure power washer. Next, a product called D-2 biological growth cleaner would be applied. This would be followed with a gentle scrub by hand and rinsed with clean water. The concentration of the hand scrub would be the surface where the names and dates are. The rough sides will receive the power wash treatment.
The Clark Lake Cemetery is one of four under the authority of Columbia Charter Township. Recently, the Township appropriated about $60,000, indirectly offset by COVID era revenues, to eliminate brush and to replace the disheveled fencing around the south, west, and north perimeters. Though the Township indicates it routinely budgets for the maintenance of the cemeteries, it is legally prohibited from using tax dollars to repair or maintain individual grave markers or headstones.
Note: Funds received in excess of the stated goal may cover additional expenses for this project, be part of the next cemetery improvement, or become part of the Foundation’s general fund to be used to benefit Clark lake.
The cemetery is a focus of the Clark Lake Memorial Day Parade. Watch the video below.
Our predecessors on this earth deserve to be remembered with dignity and respect. Thank you for leading this campaign to restore the CL cemetery to its previous consoling and inspiring condition