By
TIMOTHY
BUCK
ussian immigrants
known as, the Spiritual
Christians Molokans have been In the Glendale
area since the early 1900s. Now they want to make sure
their old cemetery will be protected from development and
preserved for the future.
The cemetery, across from
Independence High School on 75th Avenue, has been in there
since shortly after the Spiritual Christians Molokans
arrived in this area in 1911.
"The city is coming up around
it," said Church of the Spiritual Molokans* of Arizona
president Bill John Tolmachoff
Tolmochoff. "We want to see that it is
preserved. [* The
term "Molokan"
is a misnomer.]
"It is in kind of an usual spot.
Years ago there were farms all around it but now there are
buildings and a high school. We just want to make sure it
is not forgotten."
Tolmachoff Tolmochof
and other members of the congregation church have petitioned the city to
designate the cemetery as an historic site. There are
approximately 800 sites city-wide (continued on page A16)
identified as of historic or architectural interest.
The Glendale Historic
Preservation Commission will review the request. If the
request is approved, the cemetery would be designated on
the city's zoning map and recognized as historically
significant. The process could take from six months up to
a year to complete.
|
Click
on
Photos to Enlarge
Photo by Bill Dosham
Glendale's Spiritual
Christians Church of the Spiritual Molokans
wants
to protect a cemetery it has used since 1911
across 75th Avenue from Independence High School.
The historic designation would
provide "extra protection" for the site if someone wants
to develop the area, according to Tom Lemon, the city's
staff liaison to the Historic Preservation Commission. "If
someone comes in for any kind of development activity,
they would have to go through a public-hearing process to
develop the site," Lemon said.
This extra protection would help
to ensure that the site is not destroyed if development
does occur, Lemon said.
The cemetery is just under two
acres in size, according to Tolmachoff
Tolmochof.
The congregation church is
unsure just how many people are buried in the cemetery
since many of the early graves were marked with wooden
stakes which have been knocked down or rotted away over
the years.
|
Photo by Bill Dosham
"The city is coming up around it," said Church
of the Spiritual Molokans president Bill John Tolmachoff Tolmochoff.
"We want to see that it is preserved."
The Spiritual Christians Molokans (which
means "milk drinkers" in Russian) are a dissident
group which broke away from the Russian Orthodox Church
and came to the United States seeking farm land and
religious freedom.
The group, of which about 20 families
remain in Glendale today, was brought to Arizona from
California by the Greene and Griffin real estate firm. The
Spiritual Christians
Molokans
grew sugar beets, among other crops, on their farms to pay
for part of the cost of their trip and to provide product
for Glendale's sugar-beet factory.
The men wore long beards and the
women ankle-length dresses in accordance with their
religious beliefs and
Russian customs.
The original settlers, on
property that was then two miles west of the town of
Glendale, were the Tolmachoffs, Popoffs, Treguboffs,
Kulikoffs and Conovoloffs. Maryvale is named after Mary Tolmachoff Tolmochoff-Long the wife of
developer John F. Long. Other families include: Bogdanoff, Galitzen,
Gozdiff, Kotoff, Mendrin, Prohoroff, Shubin, Pivovaroff,
Rudometkin, Slivkoff, Susoeff, Teckenoff, Uraine, Valov
and others.
|