Controversial and sacred in turns, this small corner of land tucked away between libraries and government offices has a somber history.
The Huron Indian Cemetery, now formerly known as the Wyandot National Burying Ground, was founded in 1843 after the forced displacement of the Wyandot Nation (a move that took them from Ohio to Kansas). The cemetery became the final resting place for an unknown number of natives, with limited documentation of who is buried here.
After the move, roughly one hundred natives succumbed to illness (presumably typhoid or measles) and their bodies were carried to a ridge overlooking the Kansas and Missouri Rivers, thus establishing the cemetery. The land was eventually ceded by the government to the Wyandot Nation, giving them rights to the cemetery until 1855, when the nation's tribal status was dissolved. Regardless of this, the cemetery was still designated a burial ground and continued its purpose.
In the 1890s, the Wyandotte Nation of Oklahoma agreed to sell the land to local developers and in 1906, the land was set to be sold and the remains moved to another cemetery nearby. However, this move was a controversial one. A set of sisters, daughters of Andrew Syrenus Conley, fought this sale to the point of essentially barricading their family's burial site and defending it at gunpoint for nearly two years.
One of the sisters, Eliza "Lyda" Conley, became the first native woman attorney admitted into the Supreme Court when she argued the cemetery's case and attempted to prevent the sale of the land. Despite her plea and the court being sympathetic, the case was ruled against her.
Despite this apparent failure, in 1916, Congress did pass legislation to protect the cemetery. This was done with the aid of Kansas Senator Charles Curtis, a multiracial politician who would eventually become vice president to Herbert Hoover.
Lyda Conley participated in the care of the cemetery, and she and her sisters were eventually buried beside her parents. Her sister Helena's grave even forebodingly reads 'Cursed be the villain that molest their graves' as what seems to be a final warning.
Numerous other attempts have been made to sell the land, but the controversy and battles were almost effectively resolved in September of 1971, when the cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The final resolution came in 1998, when the Wyandot Nations of Oklahoma and Kansas both formally signed an agreement that the land would be used exclusively for religious and cultural purposes, and officially deemed it a sacred site.