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Resolution Establishing a 5 -Year Action Plan for Historic City Cemetery <br />Page 3 <br />Center for History and that in 2008 the DAR Schuyler Colfax Chapter and volunteers from the DuComb <br />Center raked leaves, trimmed bushes, scraped, primed and painted the rod iron fence which surrounds <br />City Cemetery; and <br />the Council recognizes that the City Cemetery Trust Fund # 730 has a modest balance <br />with one item noted in the budget detail that cemetery records have begun to be digitized; yet so much <br />more that needs to be addressed so that City Cemetery can again become a place of peace and learning <br />about the countless number of persons who are buried there, the magnificent tombstones, the veterans <br />section, the potter's field which provide an opportunity to appreciate and renew our interest in our City's <br />history, its former residents; and a cemetery uniquely located in a developing urban setting; and <br />creative and innovative methods such as those used to renovate and re- dedicate the <br />gravesites of Charles Curtis, who served as a U.S. Vice - President from 1929 -1933, and his wife, Anna <br />Baird Curtis, who are buried in Topeka Cemetery in Kansas. The project went from gravesites which <br />"looked terrible and embarrassing" to upgrading cemetery roads, curbing, replacement of flag poles, and <br />upgrading the gravesites to include engraving the Vice - Presidential Seal into the granite headstone and <br />"Son of the Kanza Nation" to honor the Vice - President's Native American heritage. The first donation <br />received for the cemetery renovation project came from the Potawatomi Nation, which triggered <br />donations from the Sac and Fox Nations, the John Haupt Chapter of the Daughters of the American <br />Revolution, local historians and other interested groups and citizens; with a public celebration and <br />rededication taking place in 2002. <br />a;os Xor Ga it raWzwd,, by the Common Council of the City of South Bend, Indiana, as <br />follows: <br />Section I. The Common Council believes that the City of South Bend's oldest cemetery, City <br />Cemetery, has been neglected for far too long. With the eye- opening experience which took place at the <br />1St annual "Schuyler Colfax Day in South Bend, Indiana" in March of this year, the Council sees an <br />opportunity to collaborate together with the City Administration, the Historic Preservation Commission, <br />the Colfax Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and the many individuals and groups <br />who have expressed an interest in preserving, sustaining and taking positive actions to revitalize City <br />Cemetery. The State of Indiana is known as the "Mother of U.S. Vice - Presidents" - namely Schuyler <br />Colfax, Thomas A. Hendricks, Charles W. Fairbanks, Thomas Marshall and Dan Quayle; The Council <br />believes that South Bend should be a leader in preserving more of our rich history by making City <br />Cemetery another destination point which enriches our present and future by remembering and <br />preserving our past. <br />Section II. The Common Council therefore recommends the establishment of a 5 -year Action <br />Plan for the revitalization and preservation of City Cemetery, which shall be overseen and monitored by <br />the Community Relations Committee of the South Bend Common Council. Specific objectives shall <br />include but not be limited to the following: <br />