Winston-Salem State students, the Professional Grounds Management Society and others united for an Outreach project at the Odd Fellows Cemetery Feb. 22.
Beginning promptly at 10 a.m., PGMS branch members, high school and college students, volunteers and Greek organizations participated in the cleanup at the 13-acre site.
Approximately 20 WSSU students participated in the cleanup. WSSU volunteers included athletes and members of Greek organizations.
According to the PGMS website, the organization was established in 1911 for individuals with the purpose of education and professional advancement.
David Davis, associate director in landscaping services at Wake Forest University said, “When Mr. Clyburn reached out to me and told me about this place, I realized that with my connections I could put the right team together to do a great job out here.”
Davis is also a member of PGMS.
Friends of Odd Fellows Cemetery is a historic site that was established in 1911 by two fraternal orders: The Winston City Lodge and the Winston Star Lodge. Vera Stepp, the widow of former President Henry Stepp, is the secretary of the cemetery. She said she wants her husband’s legacy to live on.
“They are not going to let his dream die, so this [the event] is seeing his dream come true,” she said.
James Clyburn, the president of the Cemetery said that the No. 1 priority at Odd Fellows is to get family members interested in cleaning their families’ plots. He said that it would be a great help for the cemetery.
“I have six loved ones buried here, and most likely, some people’s family members have died and they forgot that they have loved ones buried. This is one of our primary reasons to see it get cleaned back up,” Clyburn said.
The volunteers picked up litter, removed and loaded brush and wood, shoveled, sowed grass, raked, spread straw and removed English Ivy from the base of trees.
Soldiers from different wars like the Spanish American War, the Vietnam War and World War I are laid to rest at the cemetery.
“I’m very proud of WSSU, as well as WFU, for coming out. Some came out for the Martin Luther King cleanup too. They’re very active and eager to bring the cemetery back to the way it’s supposed to look,” Clyburn said.
Josh Banks, a communications major at WFU, said that instead of just lying in bed, he figured he could be doing something beneficial for the community.
“I just came out to volunteer a little bit. Anything dealing with volunteering is always a good thing,” he said.
Lunch was provided by Village Tavern.
The PGMS will host the cemetery cleanup event annually.