Introduction
The Cemetery Advisory Commission’s first project related to Indigent Burials was in 2003. Five memorials, at five sites throughout our County where the majority of County Burials have occurred since the Gold Rush, were placed and dedicated. These sites represent the burial sites of approximately 15,000 people, most buried with no grave markers.
What is an Indigent?
First we need to explore a bit of terminology. All those we are remembering were “County Burials”…people buried by and at the expense of the County of Sacramento. They may have been County Hospital patients, Coroner’s Cases, or simply people who had no funds for a private burial. A common word referring to these people is indigent… derived from the verb “to need.” One thing we know about those who buried as “indigents” is that they do not conform to a stereotype. One of the “indigents” buried in the Sacramento Historic City Cemetery discovered one of the richest silver mines in Nevada but was buried as an indigent when his family was not available to pay for his interment. An indigent may be a father, a mother, a brother, a sister, a child, a friend, who lost their job in a recession...or a relative who lost all in the great depression...or someone who made some poor decisions, or someone with an unexpected illness that decimated their savings. They are all persons that we need to treat with respect and dignity….and remember as we would like to be treated…and remembered
Sacramento Indigent Areas
Most of you have heard of a Potter’s Field, a term often applied to indigent grave sites. “Potter’s Field” is a biblical reference to land rich with clay. Being an area poor for farming or for even a quarry wasteland, these areas became convenient locations for disposal of those too poor to afford the orthodox cemeteries. Well, in Sacramento, there have been numerous Potter’s Fields since the Gold Rush. There are indigents buried in many of our cemeteries. Since the 1800’s, state law has made county coroners responsible for interring the remains of any person whose estate cannot cover the expenses and no other party steps forward to make such arrangements. In Sacramento County, over the past 150 years, we know that the County Coroner contracted with at least 19 cemeteries for the burial or cremation of indigents. These 19 cemeteries include sites owned by cities, religious groups, fraternal organizations, and private parties. We also know that charitable groups and individuals have voluntarily provided the burial expenses for many more individuals who could not afford this expense—most cemeteries in the county contain these “charitable burials.”
Current indigent burials are handled through a contracted funeral home and are buried in a group internment each year at a contracted cemetery. The cremated remains are placed in separate clearly marked containers and interred in an assigned spot inside the grave. A marker is placed at each indigent burial site.
As of 2010, all veterans are automatically interred at the VA National Cemetery in Dixon unless family is known and requests differently.