The Colonial Park cemetery in Savannah has a rich and macabre history.
Built in 1750, many of Savannah's earliest settlers were buried here, including 700 victims of the great yellow fever epidemic of 1820, all of whom were interred in a mass grave. It is said that the actual number of Savannahians who fell to the plague numbered 666, but the total was rounded up to curtail any mention of the beast. The cemetery also served as the cities duelling grounds from 1740 until 1877.
Savannah was spared from the total destruction of Sherman's March to the Sea during the Civil War, when Sherman presented the city to Abraham Lincoln as a Christmas gift in 1864. But the occupying Union soldiers did leave their mark in Savannah in a unique and unusual way - by subtly altering the gravestones in the Colonial cemetery. Along the far wall of the cemetery lie dozens of gravestones which the soldiers dug up and displaced. They changed the dates of many on the headstones with their bayonets; one man living to the ripe old age of 421, his neighbour living 544 years, and another man's son was born 1000 years before his father.
One of the most historic and haunted places in one of America's most beguiling cities.
