Our history.

Oak Hill Cemetery has a past as rough-and-tumble as the region itself. 

 

From the time it was officially founded in 1885 to provide burials within the boundaries of the newly incorporated city of Hammond, Oak Hill has been a cemetery in transition. 

 

What began as a Catholic cemetery was expanded acre-by-acre through donations from the city’s founding families and finally the sale of 3.5 acres of the now-vacant St. Joseph Church property. 

 

Through 1961, the cemetery’s evolution is orderly — vigorous sales campaigns make Oak Hill a popular choice for city residents. That all changes in 1962 when Oak Hill Cemetery Co. President M. Morton Towle dies and a still-unknown owner takes over. Two years later, banker John Wilhem and realtor Warren Reeder purchase Oak Hill due to lax record-keeping.

 

When Reeder dies in 1976, the cemetery loses its patron and once again falls into disrepair. Without a traceable owner, plots are resold, tombstones are discarded and funeral dollars paid in advance go missing. Ownership of the cemetery is transferred — the result of Roy Roark’s winning hand in a local poker game.

 

It would be another 16 years before a respectful owner would be found to bring order to a century of intermittent neglect when North Township took title to Oak Hill in 2012. 

 

Here's a look at some of the famous figures who reside here:


On behalf of the brave veterans laid to rest at Oak Hill Cemetery, we are asking for your help. A $25 annual donation is all it takes to care for veterans graves, where there are no living relatives to help out. All donations go directly to maintaining the plot and stone. Please call Cemetery Director Patricia Wolfe at (219) 746-7668 or email wolfep@ntto.net to have a veteran assigned to you.