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Friday, April 19, 2024

Ione Cemetery

Ione Public Cemetery


Ione Public Cemetery Tour

This year Ross Allison has collaborated with the Ione Public Cemetery to bring this special tour to this years Paracon line up. There will be only 1 tour each night of the Paracon (8/3 and 8/4) at 8 PM and limited to 25 people each. The tour will last for roughly an hour. You must be 13 or older to attend the tour.

This is an add-on. Purchasing this event will not give you access to the Paracon. You must purchase a Visitation, Apparaition or Full Possession ticket for access to the Paracon.

About the Cemetery

The Ione Public Cemetery, the only public cemetery within the boundaries of Township #2 Ione Public Cemetery District,  is located in the city of Ione, Amador County, California. This cemetery has been in operation since 1850, and contains the grave sites of some of the earliest residents of Calaveras/Amador County. One headstone indicates the remains of the “first white child born in Ione Valley” are buried here. A noted actor and comedian of his day, Albert Theodore William Courtright and his wife, Mary Jan “Jennie Lee” Courtright, a well-known actress as well, are interred in the Ione Cemetery. Visitors may also find the headstone of Elizabeth W. Withington, who moved to Ione Valley in 1852. She won awards for her artistic works, some of which can be seen at the Huntington Library and the Amador County Archives. One might also happen upon the burial site of Nathaniel Cecil, who was born into slavery, but who was able to purchase his freedom three years after arriving in California.

The Public Cemetery is divided into two main sections. The older portion contains family plots outlined with concrete curbs and marked with various sizes and styles of upright memorials. The newer section is a grassy lawn area with flat, brass or granite markers. The Cemetery also hosts a Mausoleum for above ground interments, a Columbarium for above ground niches for cremains, and the newest addition: The Natural (or Green) Burial section.

From the cemetery, visitors can gaze upon the famous Preston Castle, in the process of restoration, a reminder of a twentieth century experiment in juvenile corrections. Or, one could look into the adjacent Charles Howard Park, once the site of horse racing which brought dignitaries, including the governor, from Sacramento to watch and wager. The rural setting adds a sense of tranquility to a place devoted to those resting in peace.

Friday Tour

Time: Friday 8/3, 8 PM

Saturday Tour

Time: Saturday 8/4, 8 PM

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