Mizpah Cemetery

Platteville, Weld County, Colorado

 

Located 1/2 mile East of Platteville on Weld County Road 32 in Township 3, Range 66, Section 18. The Platteville Mizpah Cemetery is the oldest public cemetery in Weld County that is still in use. It is operated by the Town of Platteville. Originally called the Sandhill Cemetery by the pioneers, it was renamed Mizpah Cemetery after 1926. In 1926, the Mizpah Club made the improvement of the cemetery their club project. With the club as a driving force, cemetery improvement became a community project. Trees, shrubs, and grass were planted as money became available. A WPA project in 1939 fenced the cemetery and installed the first rock gateway. The second rock gateway was built and dedicated to the memory of the area servicemen who lost their lives in World War II.
An unknown person is the first recorded burial, the first named burial was in 1873. Persons associated with the nearby fur trading posts and Fort Vasquez may have been buried on the hill as early as the 1840s. A local folklore heroine named Rattlesnake Kate is buried in Mizpah Cemetery. One day in 1925, she killed 140 rattlesnakes on her way to a pond with her son. The snakes were collected and the skins were used to make a dress, which she wore to many functions. Her story is on file with the Platteville Pioneer Museum.

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Name Row Lot Space Notes
Yamaguchi, Frank Masatake   80 2  
Ybarra, Anthony   191 9  
Ybarra, Antonio   11N 6  
Ybarra, Baby Girl 18 18N    
Ybarra, Eulalia   11N 5  
Ybarra, Felpia B   119 6  
Ybarra, Helen 18 18N    
Ybarra, Manuel   191 5  
Ybarra, Pablo   11N 4  
Ybarra, Secondino   11N 6  
Young, Cleota Lillie 3 2 11  
Young, George E   2 12  
Young, Grayce Elaine   209 6  
Younts, Bernice   216 3  
Younts, William Lee   216 2  
Yurchick, Annie   248 1  
Yurk, Ester 20 222