Yerba Beuna Cemetery
Source: Daily Alta California, 21 March 1850.
The gigantic strides which the city has for a number of years made in this direction, were so vividly apparent to the city authorities, that an act authorizing a special tax of ten thousand dollars to be levied, for the purpose of removing the remains of deceased persons interred in the Yerba Buena Cemetery, was passed duirng the Legislative session of eighteen hundred and sixty. The amount was duly raised, and now lies in the City and County Treasury, subject to disposition according to the terms of the act. But is is now stated that it is very doubful whether the above named sum will be sufficient to disinter all bodies buried in this ground; but, at all events, the money will go far towards effecting their removal, and a commencment should be made at once, for houses peopled with living tenants already cast their shadows down on these subterranenan cabins of the dead. The opening of the Market Street Railway has given a wonderful impetus to improvements hereabouts, to remove these remains are the busy hand of enterprise invades the sacred precincts of the tomb."
Source: Daily Alta California, 25 June 1861.
Source: Daily Alta California, 22 July 1862.
Source: San Joaquin Valley Argus, 9 March 1889.
When it became known that the workmen were excavating on the site of the famous Yerba Buena Cemetery, a great crowd collected to watch the uncovering of the graves. Many rotted coffins were discovered, but in every case, the bodies had completely decomposed, owing to the damp and sandy nature of the soil, and only a pile of bones remained to tell that a human being had once been interred there.
By Tuesday night the workmen had uncovered the remains of sixteen bodies and these were placed in a little box and left for the Coroner. No one was sent form the Coroner's office on Tuesday night, however, and when the workmen went to work yesterday morning all the skulls in the collection had been stolen. It is presumed that they were taken by medical students, or ghouls. What remained of the sixteen bodies was taken away by the Coroner's deputy yesterday afternoon, and the bones will be reburied to remain until, perhaps, the advance of civilization once more unearths them in the midst of a populated district.
FIND ANCIENT TOMBSTONE
Both the United Irish Societies and the Society of California Pioneers have applied for permission to take the tombstone found last Friday and inscribed, "Sacred to the Memory of Michael O'Leary, late of the City of Cork, Ireland, Who Departed this Life October 22, 1851, Aged 32 Years. Requiescat in Pace."
The Irish societies lay claim to the relic, as it is sacred to the remains of one of their kith, and the Pioneers want it for their museum. It is undecided yet which society will take it away.
What the law is on the subject is a matter of doubt. R. C. O'Connor and T. P. O'Dowd, representing the Irsh Societies, appeared yesterday on the site of the exccavations to take charge of the tombstone, but were refused permission to take it away, until the matter has been settled.
The Yerba Buena Cemetery was bounded by Market, McAllister and Larkin streets, and was one of the oldest burial grounds in the city of San Francisco. The remains of many men famous in the early history of the State were interred there. No one knows just when it was established, but it was a recognized cemetery when the surrounding country was sand dunes and the city was a village on the shore line at Montgomery street. When the burial ground on the property bounded by Broadway, Vallejo, Gough and Octavia streets was established, the Yerba Buena cemetery was nearly filled with bodies.
ABOLISHED BY LEGISLATURE
The Yerba Buena Cemetery was abolized by the city hall act, passed by the State Legislature of 1869-70, providing for the removal of the cemetery and the erection of a City Hall on the property. The validity of this act was fought long and hard in the courts, on the ground that the tract was sacredly dedicated as a cemetery, and the fight was carried to the Supreme Court of the State in the case of San Francisco vs. P. II. Cannavan, who was at that time a member of the Board of Supervisors. The act was upheld, however, and the cemetery was removed in 1871.
That portion where the bodies are being found was one of the lowest spots in the cemetery, and it is probable that the graves which are being unearthed may have been covered by sand before the cemetery was removed. The graves are from twelve to twenty-five feet below the surface."
Source: San Francisco Chronicle, 9 April 1908.
The argument related to the site of the old city cemetery. Test borings have revealed the building site is the location of the old Hall of Records.
The old city cemetery site is located east of the Federal building excavation. Yesterday workmen on the Leavenworth street extension to Market street, uncovered a marble grave marker bearing the name, "John Connelley, 38, Launceston, V.D.L., Died May 5, 1851."
Nobody now knows who John Connelly was, but he evidently flourished among the first of the pioneers.
Final plans of the Federal building are being drawn in the offices of Arthur Brown Jr., San Francisco architect, and will be completed in about five months."
Source: San Francisco Chronicle, 9 June 1932.
The remains were found in a spot near the corner of McAllister and Hyde streets, about 15 feet below the present street level. They had been buried in pine boxes about 2 feet wide and 6 feet long, although little remained of the boxes.
According to H. C. Hall, civil engineer in charge of the work, more than 20 graves have been uncovered during the course of the excavation, some of them with headstones. Ball said the remains will be left where they were found.
The coins found included two $10 gold pieces dated 1843 and 1847. Five Spanish coins of the years 1700, 1733 and 1849 were also found, as well as two of Peruvian money."
Source: San Francisco Chronicle, 8 March 1934.
