Our Volunteer Efforts
The Houston Heights Odd Fellows have been helping with the upkeep of Olivewood Cemetery throughout the years. Our Past Grand, Paul Jennings, is on the board for the cemetery and heads up volunteer activities like cleanup days and tombstone restoration workshops.
Volunteer activities that the Odd Fellows have helped with at the cemetery have included cleanup days, headstone restoration workshops, and Juneteenth celebrations.
From the historical marker at the cemetery:
This cemetery served the early African-American community in Houston for approximately 100 years. The Olivewood Cemetery Association incorporated in 1875 and purchased 5.5 acres of this property that same year from Elizabeth Morin Slocomb. The organization bought two adjacent acres in 1917. Also known in its early years as olive wood, hollow wood and hollywood, it is one of the oldest known platted cemeteries in the city. The original 444 family plots comprising over 5,000 burial spaces were laid out along an elliptical drive. The burial ground contains several hundred marked graves, in addition to an unknown number of unmarked graves.
Interred here are pivotal leaders of Houston's post emancipation African-American community, including the pastor of Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church, the Rev. Elias Dibble; Businessman James B. Bell; Alderman and Landowner Richard Brock; Attorney J. Vance Lewis; Educator James D. Ryan; Physician Russell F. Ferrill; and Dentist Milton A. Baker. Also buried here are ex-slaves, laborers, sororal and fraternal organization members, and military veterans.
This cemetery features obelisks, statuary, curbing and interior fencing. The burial ground also includes examples of preemancipation burial practices, including upright pipes (symbolizing the path between the worlds of the living and the dead), ocean shells as grave ornaments and text containing upside down or backwards letters (as used in some West African cultures to signify death). Today, Olivewood Cemetery remains as a key historical site in Houston, serving as a testament to the foresight and perseverance of the cemetery founders.