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Welcome to the
world of Maple Grove. Join us as we move on to “imagine new possibilities.”
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Would you have ever
thought that you would be invited into a cemetery community, especially
while you are still able to view and contemplate this message? |
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We, at Maple Grove,
are excited about the future and its limitless possibilities. We encourage
and await the participation of those willing to join with others to explore
and imagine new possibilities for learning, growth and personal
development. Maple Grove offers opportunities to research and study
history, to study nature as well as perspectives on the human experience.
But probably more important is the opportunity to join with others of like
mind and spirit who come forward and whose collective energy will help to
shape new possibilities in any area of life.
Conversations are
evolving in the following areas:
History
Looking through
the lens of history offers a wonderful way to better understand our present
lives, community and society. Those who managed Maple Grove before us left a
rich legacy of non-sectarian, community-oriented policies, and thorough
historical records. We have already begun research to uncover information
about the African-American individuals and families whose gravesites are
located in the South Border section of Maple Grove. We hope to learn much
about the social, political, economic, and health conditions in our
surrounding community a century ago. We will develop materials and programs
to help school children and community visitors “make connections” between
past and present times.
We are collaborating with the Richmond Hill Historical
Society, the Long Island Division of the Queens Borough Public Library, and
other historical organizations to learn as much as possible about people
from all walks of life who are buried at Maple Grove. We also look forward
to offering the research tools and resources needed to help visitors do
their own genealogical research.
Maple Grove
Cemetery
is, among other things, an observation point for nature, with an extensive
variety of trees and landscaping features.
Our unique and picturesque urban setting is a living palette of
nature with a variety of local wildlife, including: squirrels, chipmunks,
raccoons, red tail hawks, rabbits, falcons, fish, migrating water fowl,
geese, ducks, and turtles.
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As a part of our
Master Plan for the cemetery grounds,
Maple Grove
will continue to focus on the trees and landscaping by launching a new
planting program. |
Also, in
conjunction with local colleges and high schools, we are planning to expand
our community education program by including a project to label all tree
varieties at
Maple Grove
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Our
recent plantings have included: Honey Locusts, Paper Bark Maples and Ash
specimens. In the future, we
expect to plant (list the types of trees) and new
clump grasses – these are so beautiful plus they have the added benefit of
renewing themselves
Cemeteries, often
visited as parks and historic sites, provide information about our
bi-cultural, historic, artistic and architectural heritage.
We at
Maple Grove
are planning programs that will offer more opportunities to share our
resources through study and preservation of our grave-markers and statuary.
Walking tours will be developed and tailored to a variety of
interests. Visitors may also take
advantage of a proposed Technology Resource Room to gather additional
information about the natural and artistic features at
Maple Grove.
Through a unique
partnership with Public School 99, the Kew Gardens Arts and Recreation
Council, Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning and the Maple Grove Cemetery,
we are entering the second year of a three year arts and education project.
In year one, 6th grade students, working with a visual
artist, engaged in the study of gargoyles and grotesques by constructing
their own version of “guardians” that are permanently installed in the
auditorium of the school. This
year, the project has expanded to include students from all grades and their
parents, again working with a visual artist to examine the traditional and
contemporary use of mosaics. In
the final year, students, parents and interested community members will
create a guardian sculpture as a gift to
Maple Grove
to be permanently installed in the cemetery.
Throughout history,
human have sought meaning for the mysteries of life (and death).
All cultures, since the evolution of mankind, have explained their
understanding of these mysteries through various artistic works.
These artifacts, treasured and revered, are an expression of the
human spirit that cannot be stilled through death and live on in the work
left behind. The generations
which have gone before us were filled with cultural diversity and have left
us an amazing collection of artworks. Through
these works, their legacy can be better understood and marveled at for they
explain their understanding of life and can teach future generations many
lessons.
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