Jefferson County Cemetery

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Jefferson County Cemetery. Photo by Michelle Williams/al.com
Ronely Kuhn speaks before a burial at Jefferson County Cemetery, December 31, 1941. Birmingham Post staff photo

The Jefferson County Cemetery is a cemetery used by Jefferson County located at the end of Ballpark Drive southeast of Morris. Used mainly for pauper's burials, the cemetery contains approximately 8,000 graves as of 2016.

Brown-varnished wood coffins were formerly assembled for the purpose by inmates in the county's prison camps. These were marked in chalk with the deceased's surname and a "W" or "C" denoting their race. An identification number was added after they were unloaded at the cemetery. In recent decades, commercial pressboard coffins have been used, and the graves marked by a cement-filled coffee can stamped with an identification number.

Prior to 1942 no services were held in connection with burials at the county cemetery. That year the Jefferson County Commission approved a proposal to employ a minister to give a prayer. Ronely Kuhn, pastor of Kimberly Methodist Church, was given a small monthly stipend to read from scripture and deliver a brief message between the unloading of the coffins from the county hearse and their distribution to the prepared burial lots. Since the establishment of Cooper Green Hospital, a chaplain from that has taken over those duties. Often a representative of the Morris Beautification Board will provide a carnation for each coffin.

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