Creating a Family Legacy in a Historic Cemetery
by Iam NOAH, Caretaker Walker Chapel Historic Cemetery and Columbarium
Why Historic Cemeteries Matter
Long after we are gone, families still need a place to gather. A place to remember, a place to tell stories, a place where children and grandchildren can quietly say, “This is where our family rests.” In Northern Virginia, where neighborhoods and skylines constantly change, historic cemeteries provide something increasingly rare: peace and permanence.
At Walker Chapel Historic Cemetery, families are creating a legacy meant to endure for generations — on sacred grounds that have already watched over Arlington families for more than 150 years.
The Northern Virginia area is rich with history and historic cemeteries. That is good, but realistically, few cemeteries are active and available for new interments and inurnments. Fewer historic cemeteries are faith-based cemeteries, and even fewer are Methodist cemeteries. Faith-based signifies they care and are not profit-oriented. Methodist signifies a sense of order, stability, and simplicity. Until now, families soon found that many faith-based cemeteries are reserved for members of the Cemetery’s church rather than the community at large. All that changed in 2019!
Walker Chapel Historic Cemetery, Open to All
Walker Chapel is a Methodist church with a 1.5-acre attached cemetery. The land was donated by the Walker Family in 1871 and is now an Arlington, Virginia, Historic District. Congregations have labored to make this sacred ground a place of permanence and remembrance, fostering family continuity and the continuity of future generations. For a century, the memorial options at the Chapel were like other churches. Only casketed burials and, later, a small flat granite stone in the patio marking the location of the first Walker Chapel. But all that changed in 2019!
Opening History to New Family Legacy Spaces
In May of 2019, one faithful member of the Chapel loved the cemetery so deeply that she entrusted her estate to its future care, ensuring that future generations would always have a sacred place of remembrance. Dorothy Glenn’s gift made what is seen today possible. We are replenishing her gift by returning all Columbaria license income to the Dorothy Glenn Fund, where it will be available for future generations to carry on her legacy.
Construction began, and in July 2023, the columbaria were installed atop the new solid stone wall surrounding the cemetery hill, facing the Chapel at the same level as the cemetery’s interior grounds. We intentionally built this gravity wall to survive for a millennium. In the Spring of 2024, the landscaping was completed, and the Columbarium was opened to the community.
There are three Columbaria with both companion and family niches. The companion niche is for two, and the family niche is for four to six urns. Each Columbarium is wrapped in natural rock and topped with a thick slab. The niches are faced with granite plaques inscribed with the names and dates of the deceased, and at the bottom of the plaque, a favorite family saying.
A Family Legacy waiting for You
The Columbarium at Walker Chapel Cemetery is a place to keep ashes permanently. It becomes a place to visit and for family gatherings of remembrance. They are on consecrated grounds of great beauty and peace. The cemetery is in the Walker Chapel Historic District, with the Chapel itself, which is a classical white church on the hill. They are a family legacy that is:
- Permanent: Built on a gravity wall of solid stone like the pyramids, determined to last a thousand years or more,
- Protected: Encased in solid stone and faced with engraved granite covers,
- Historic: Evolving from the Walker Family Burial Grounds in the mid-1800’s to a full-service Methodist church contained within a Historic District monitored by Arlington County,
- Trusted: The Chapel is known throughout the community for being a church that knows how to care for itself and welcomes individuals without exception,
- Faithful: The Chapel has evolved from a small meeting place to a full church but still retains the warmth of a small church that is a community of grace for all of God’s children that loves God, loves our neighbors as ourselves, repeat! And
- Planned: From events to finances, advance planning creates a solid, stable, and forward-looking church destined to span the coming generations.
Families gather around kitchen tables for one generation.
Historic cemeteries allow families to gather across many generations
Building a Family Legacy
Some families reserve adjacent niches so that generations may remain together.
Others choose companion niches years in advance, long before they are needed, simply because they want their children to know that decisions have already been made with love and care.
Many visitors quietly tell us the same thing: “We do not want to become forgotten.” Families often think they are choosing a resting place for ashes. In reality, they are choosing a gathering place for future generations. A family legacy is not simply where we are remembered; it is where our children and grandchildren will come to remember us.
Imagine grandparents occupying a companion niche while their children reserve adjacent niches nearby. Years later, grandchildren return on Easter Sunday, place flowers, and tell their children stories about family members they never personally met.
Visiting and Family Gatherings
Many families tell us that after their first visit, they simply sit quietly on one of the benches and realize they have found the place they were looking for.
You may visit every day, year-round. The Cemetery is always open via the main gate, the curved rock staircase in the parking lot, or the utility ramp. There are benches, flowers, and a special quiet around Memorial Day, Easter, and Christmas. There are no barriers to visitation, although forest friends may wander the grounds at night. If you let us know in advance, we would love to meet with you to tour the cemetery, answer your questions, and listen to your wishes. We are all volunteers with ties to the Church and serve to provide compassion and support in times of loss and to facilitate the transition to eternal care.
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