The bodies of
Marcus and Narcissa Whitman,
and others killed on November 29-30, 1847
are buried under the marble tombstone on the right.
The headstone on the left marks the resting
place of William Gray and his wife.
Walking towards
the Shaft Hill from the Visitor Center, there is a fenced off area that
is a small cemetery. There is a large marble tombstone with words and
names inscribed on what has become known as the Great Grave--
SACRED
TO THE MEMORY OF
MARCUS WHITMAN
NARCISSA PRENTISS
WHITMAN
ANDREW ROGERS JR.
LUCIEN SAUNDERS
NATHAN KIMBALL
CROCKETT A. BEWLEY
ISAAC GILLEN
JOHN SAGER
FRANCIS SAGER
JACOB HOFFMAN
MARSH
AMOS SALES
JACOB D. HALL
_________________________
MASSACRED NEAR THIS SPOT
BY CAYUSE INDIANS
NOV. 29-30, 1847.
(Please
note -- Isaac Gillen's last name should be spelled Gilliland.
Jacob D. Hall should be Peter D. Hall).
The Great Grave
houses the bodies of those killed at Whitman Mission on
November 29 - 30, 1847. Previous to the placement of the
marble tomb in 1897, the bodies had only been protected
from wild animals by a mound of dirt and an overturned wagon.
The current tombstone is in the same location chosen by
the Oregon Volunteers in 1848. On the 50th anniversary of
what was called the "Whitman Massacre," the bodies were
re-interred in the permanent gravesite.
William Gray, an
associate of Whitman's, had moved on to the Willamette Valley in 1842.
After the Whitman's deaths and until his own death in 1889, he tried
to raise money for a proper grave and
a memorial to the American Board missionaries. Gray was buried in
Astoria, Oregon, but was re-interred in 1916 at Waiilatpu, the place
he had assisted Whitman in missioning to the Cayuse people.
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