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Fry Pioneer Cemetery
Sierra Vista, Arizona
Contents:
Preface - Victoria Yarbrough
History of Fry Pioneer Cemetery - Thomas C Shupert
Partial list of names buried in the Fry Pioneer Cemetery
Aerial photo with names
Map
Markers
Internet references
Fry Pioneer Cemetery
Historical Background
Thomas C Shupert- Chairman
Fry Pioneer Cemetery Preservation Committee
The Fry Pioneer Cemetery, as it is now known, is located between Sixth Street and Seventh
Street, about one-half block north of Fry Boulevard; a major east-west artery in the rapidly
growing city of Sierra Vista, Arizona. It is one mile east of the main gate of Fort Huachuca, a
post that has been in almost continuous use since it began as a military camp in 1877.
The Cemetery is located within the SE 1/4 of the SE 1/4 Section 34, Township 21 South, Range
20 East of the Gila and Salt River Meridian, Cochise County, Arizona at an elevation of 4598
feet above sea level. Fry Boulevard lies along the South line of Section 34, with 7th Street along
the East line. The cemetery site is part of the Oliver Fry homestead of 280 acres, which covered
all of the SE 1/4 of said Section 34 and E 1/2 of the SW 'A and the SW 1/4 of Section 35
adjoining on the East (across 7th Street). The patent for the homestead from the United States of
America was dated August 11, 1916 and recorded September 26, 1916 in Book 66 of Deeds of
Real Estate, page 144, records of Cochise County, Arizona.
Erwin Fry and Lillian S. Fry, his wife, designated the cemetery as "RESERVED" in Block 9 on
the subdivision plat of FIRST ADDITION TO THE TOWNSITE OF FRY recorded January 13,
1955 in Book 3 of Maps, page 127, records of Cochise County, Arizona. The original
"RESERVED" parcel is shown as 180 feet North and South, and 265 feet East and West,
bounded by 7th Street on the East, 6th Street on the West, with the South line being 350 feet
North of the original platted North line of Fry Boulevard. Lots 3 and 10 of Block 9 are adjacent on
the South, with Lots 4 and 9 of the said Block on the North Side. The East 10 feet of the
"RESERVED" parcel was dedicated to the County of Cochise for the purpose of a public
roadway in 1978 by Deed of Dedication recorded in Docket 1265, page 23, records of Cochise
County, Arizona.
The cemetery, approximately one-half acre in size, is on relatively flat ground with a number of
native trees and a few bushes. A chain link fence surrounds the property. Inside the fence,
there is a 3-ft. brick wall, 60 x 144 ft., which encloses thirteen Fry family graves, all with
permanent headstones. One hundred ninety-nine persons are buried outside the wall-enclosed
portion. Only two of these outer graves have existing markers, and the two others are outlined
with stones. The lack of tombstones is due to the fact that many families who buried here could
not afford to erect a permanent marker, or to acts of vandalism over the years.
In 1956, the name of Fry, Arizona, was changed to Sierra Vista, which means "Mountain View"
in Spanish. A growing city with a 2005 population of almost 42,000, Sierra Vista serves as the
business and cultural center of Cochise County, and a regional center for southeastern Arizona.
It is surrounded by three mountain ranges - the Huachuca, the Dragoon and the Mule - and it is
bordered to the east by the San Pedro River. Located about twenty miles north of the
international boundary between the United States and Mexico, Sierra Vista shares its 131
square miles with its former neighbor and progenitor, Fort Huachuca, which it annexed in 1971.
Sierra Vista's history and that of its predecessor, Fry, Arizona, began in 1877 when Fort
Huachuca was established as a camp, and later, a fort. Sited against a scenic backdrop of the
Huachuca Mountains, the post during the course of the "Apache Wars" of the 1870s and 1880s
was asked with vital missions in the remote frontier that was southern Arizona at the time. They
were to control Indian disturbances, to patrol the international boundary line, to facilitate
construction of a regional railroad network, and to protect the settlers whose numbers grew after
the discovery of silver at Tombstone.
Danger from Apaches became a thing of the past after Geronimo surrendered in the late 1880s,
and most of Arizona's military posts were closed. Fort Huachuca, however, was retained
because of continuing border troubles. In 1913, the all-black 10th Cavalry, the famous "Buffalo
Soldiers", arrived at Fort Huachuca where they remained for the next twenty years. They
accompanied General John J. Pershing into Mexico on his Punitive Expedition, an unsuccessful
attempt to capture Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa. When Pershing went on to France after
the U.S. entered the war, the Buffalo Soldiers continued to maintain border security.
Fort Huachuca's usefulness lasted through the 1920's and 1930's. During World War II, thirty
thousand troops were stationed there, at a post that had been considered in the 1930's to be
adequate for only 10,000 men. When World War II was over, Fort Huachuca was declared
surplus property and was turned over to the state of Arizona. But in only a few years it was
reactivated by Army Engineers during the Korean Conflict.
Since the 1950's, when southeastern Arizona was discovered to be an ideal climate for
communications efforts, Fort Huachuca's importance has steadily climbed. Today, a major
player in the national defense picture, the installation has been home to the U.S. Army Strategic
Communications Command, the U.S. Army intelligence Center and School, the U.S. Army
Information Systems Command, and at the present time, the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine
Command, along with other commands and services.
In its origin, Fort Huachuca was the reason for the existence of Fry and other settlements
nearby. Today, Fort Huachuca is a part of the expanding urban scene that was Garden
Canyon, or Buena, or Fry but today is Sierra Vista. The changes have been many; the post
slogan aptly illustrates Fort Huachuca's history, past and present: "From sabers to satellites".
When Oliver Fry first came to the general area called Garden Canyon, referring to one of the
several beautiful canyons in that part of the Huachuca Mountains, he saw the economic
opportunities for a farmer and rancher such as himself who could supply goods and services to
the nearby military installation. In June 1912, he med for a homestead patent, approximately
one mile east of the main gate of Fort Huachuca. In November, Oliver and his two sons, Tom
and Erwin, seventeen and fifteen respectively, came from their home in Texas with a freight car
full of supplies.
After finishing the construction of a large, two-room house, Oliver sent for the rest of the family,
who arrived in January of 1913 . At this time, Oliver and his wife, Elizabeth, had nine children:
Tom, Cora, Erwin, Edna, Raymond, Cecil, Arden, Alice and Agnes. Their last child,
June, was born in 1914. There were other settlers in the area, but no schools had been
established. In February 1913, Fry had a well dug on his homestead, then decided to operate a
small store in his home. This was one of the first general stores in that part of the county and
may well have been the start of the Fry family's influence in the community.
Approximately five miles east of the main gate of Fort Huachuca, another small community was
developing, near the present intersection of Highways 90 and 92. The residents called the
vicinity Buena (Spanish for "good"). The first school opened there in 1 91 5 . The first
graduating class of eighth-graders, in 1916 , included Erwin and Edna Fry among the five
graduates.
As the Fry family settled into life near the military post, Erwin, Oliver's second son, got a job with
a man who butchered meat for the soldiers at Fort Huachuca. The butcher gave the young man
"the livers and hearts and other pieces of meat to take home".
His mother then made mincemeat to sell at the store. They also sold eggs and milk from
their farm, as well as supplies they shipped from Benson, thirty miles to the north. Edna
and Raymond were in charge of the dairy operation, which provided milk and cream to Fort
Huachuca. As the ten Fry children became adults and married, they were active in the
growing community just outside the gates of Fort Huachuca. Two sons, Tom and Cecil,
were school bus drivers and Cecil became a teacher in the neighboring Buena School.
Much has been written about Cecil and many of those interviewed remembered Cecil and
thought highly of him. However, it was Erwin who emerged as the family entrepreneur. He
expanded the land holdings, operated several businesses and created the Fry Townsite.
Erwin married Lillian Rice on December 25 ,1923. Lillian, who had been a teacher at the
Buena School, began working in the Garden Canyon General Store and Post Office in
1929. She became the postmistress in 1937 or 1938 (there Is a conflict in reported dates).
Within one year of this event, Oliver, Erwin and Lillian Fry opened their own store on what
is known today as Fry Boulevard. They transferred the post office with them to the new
store. As was often the custom when a new building or store was built and opened, the
persons owning the building put their names on it. Thus, the community that had been
called Garden Canyon became known as Fry Arizona.
The community was known as Fry Arizona from the mid - to late - 1930's until 1956, at
which time the community was incorporated and the name Sierra Vista was chosen. It is
reported that Erwin Fry was opposed to the incorporation process and did not want the
name changed. This caused some hard feelings, which continued for many years. The
Townsite of Fry still exists as an enclave of Cochise County, within the City of Sierra Vista.
The Fry Cemetery is in Fry Townsite, but is now the property of the City of Sierra Vista.
The Fry home and store were located on what is today Fry Boulevard. Both structures
were destroyed by fire - the store in 1961, and the home in 1991 . The Fry Cemetery is the
only remaining site of the Oliver Fry homestead and the Fry family heritage. It is unknown if
Fry formally dedicated the burial ground as a cemetery; however, he and his kin were
committed to preserving the plot of land as a family cemetery and the adjacent area as a
burial ground for those known to the Fry family. This graveyard was the only known
cemetery in the vicinity from 1919 until 1961, when Cochise Memory Gardens was
established on Charleston Road near Sierra Vista. According to anecdotal evidence, the
area of the Fry Cemetery, perhaps, was used for burials before the arrival of the Fry family,
possibly as early as the 1880's. It was also said that Oliver Fry located the cemetery in its
present place because the caliche ground there was unsuitable for raising crops. The first
burial in the Fry Cemetery was that of Oliver Fry's wife, Elizabeth "Lizzie" Ruth Cathcart
Fry, who died on December 25,1919. She was forty-nine years old. Her death certificate
identifies her place of burial as "Fry Homestead". Mrs. Fry's community property interest in
the homestead was distributed to her ten children. Later, in 1940, her title ownership, along
with Oliver's, was merged into that of their son, Erwin Fry and his wife Lillian S. Fry. Oliver
himself did not die until 1959, at the age of eighty-eight.
Between 1927 and 1974, four of Oliver and Elizabeth's children were laid to rest in the
family plot: Arden Henry Fry, Cora Belle Fry Stanley, Agnes H. Fry and Cecil David Fry.
Oliver Fry's second wife, Minnie Kneton Fry was interred there, also, along with several
family members, including grandchildren.
Surrounding the Fry family plot lay the remains of almost two hundred others known to be mainly
Hispanic, but including some Anglos and a number of Yaqui Indians. Each of the deceased
family members has a marker, but the majority of the graves outside the brick wall are unmarked.
There is an existing burial list, but many buried here are "known but to God".
According to affidavits of descendants of a number of those buried in the general cemetery, those
burials were permitted by the Fry family. Due to the lack of funds, the majority of the graves had
wooden markers or were left unmarked. Their locations were attested to by surviving members of
the families. Most of the markers had been removed over the years, according to Rosa Leonard,
a descendant of several people buried in the cemetery. In 1961, the Fry family erected a brick
wall around their plot to protect it from grazing cattle. A chain link fence was erected around
the,whole cemetery, which then prevented family members from taking care of their own plots.
Ignacio "Nacho" M. Valenzuela, another descendant of those buried in the cemetery, stated that
most of those buried in the cemetery either worked for the Fry family, or were family members of
the laborers. Some of the women buried in the cemetery worked as domestics or in stores owned
by local businessmen. When asked about the reason that most of the burials outside of the Fry
Cemetery walls were non-Anglos, Fern McReynolds, of Hatfield Funeral Home in Sierra Vista
stated that before 1961 no mortuary operated in the immediate area, so many locals were buried
in Bisbee or Tombstone cemeteries. Most non-Anglos could not afford the expense of funerals in
other towns. Many also lacked the means to transport their loved ones from this area.
Jose Luis Perez, a Hispanic veteran of World War II, has a military marker at his grave. His
was one of the later burials - 1963. Perez was an uncle of several of those who presented
affidavits that many graves are located outside the boundaries of the Fry family plot. A number of
young Hispanics from this area served in the military, with very little recognition, but with a great
amount of pride.
According to Fr. Gregory Adolf of St. Andrew the Apostle Roman Catholic Church in Sierra
Vista, the parishioners of the area were served by priests from the Parish of Our Lady of Lourdes
in Benson (approximately thirty miles northeast of Sierra Vista) and Sacred Heart Parish in
Tombstone (approximately sixteen miles from Sierra Vista) during the period
from 1890 to 1957.
Therefore, parish statistics of the early residents are not in the archives of St. Andrews Parish,
which was founded in 1958. In addition, because of the distance for priests to travel, as well as
the short time that usually elapsed between an individuals death and burials, not all local burials
were recorded. "Devout laypersons read the burial prayers in the absence of a priest, and thus
accorded the deceased a Catholic burial, although unrecorded" (Adolph, 1999).
Written histories of towns and cities may limit their scope to those who shaped their communities
and made names for themselves. They seldom mention those who worked for the "movers and
shakers", but who were as much a foundation of the present community of Sierra Vista as were
their employers. The preservation of the Fry Pioneer Cemetery pays tribute not only to the Fry
family, but also to those individuals who were so important to the area. Some of their families
can be traced back four or five generations, as early migrants from Mexico. Without the
numerous Hispanics and Yaqui Indians serving as the labor force in the early years of this
community, Sierra Vista might not have become the thriving city it is today.
The Fry Pioneer Cemetery is one of the last pieces of evidence of the origins of the community; it
is imperative that it be preserved for posterity and for the future generations of this area. It is an
important piece of history.
AGUILAR
AGUIRRIA
ALCONTAR
ALVARADO
ANIZA
BALDENEGRO
BALLESTERO
BASTA
BASTITA
BAUTISTA
BENAVIDEZ
BENSELDO
BIAS
BLAS
BOJORQUEZ
BUSTARNANTE
CABALLERO
CABORCA
CALENDARIO
CAMPOS
CAMPOS
CANDELA
CARANZA
CARDENEZ
CARDENEZ
CARNE
CARRILLO
CARRILLO
CARTER
CASTANEDA
CASTANEDA
CASTILLO
CASTILLO
CASTORENA
CASTRO
CASTRO
CASTRO
CASTRO
CASTRO
CERRANO
CERRO
CERROS
CHALUPA
CHALUPA
CHAPAS
CHAVEZ
CHAVEZ
COIMOS
CONCERTO
CONTRERAS
CORALES
CORONADO
COSIO
COUCHES
COVASIO
DARIO
DIAZ
DIEGO
DURAN
ESPINOSA
ESPINOSA
ESTRELLA
FARRA
FERNANDEZ
FERNANDEZ
FOSTER
GALINDO
GARZA
GARCIA
GARCIA
GARCIA
GARCIA
GARZA
GARZA
GIBSON
GILBERT
GONZALES
GUENOFASIO
GUIEDO
GUTIERREZ
HERNANDEZ
HERNANDEZ
INEZ
LAGUNA
LAGUNA
LAGUNA
LAGUNA
LEON
LOBATO
LOBATO
LOBATO
LOBATO
LOPEZ
MALDONADO
MALDONADO
MALDONADO
MARCOS
MARTINEZ
MARTINEZ
MARTINEZ
MEDA
MENDEZ
MENDEZ
MIRA
MIRANDA
MOLINA
MONTANO
MONTECARLO
MONTENEZ
MONTEREY
MONTES
MORENO
MORENO
MORENO
MORGAS
MOYES
MOYES
MUNGUIA
MUNGUIA
NACOSARI
NASTASIO
NEZ
NOPALES
NOGALES
NORIEGA
OBISPO
OBISPO
OBREGON
PACO
PANZ A
PARRA
PARRA
PATADIALA
PERALTA
PEREZ
PEREZ
PEREZ
PEREZ
PEREZ
PEREZ
PEREZ
PLANCHA
PLANO
QUIJADA
QUINTERO
QUINTERO
RILO
RIVERA
RODRIQUEZ
RODRIQUEZ
RODRIQUEZ
RODRIQUEZ
ROMAN
ROMAN
ROMAN
RONQUILLO
RUIZ
SALVADOR
SALVADOR
SANCHEZ
SANCHEZ
SANTANA
SANTANA
SANTANA
SEPULVEDA
SEPULVEDA
SIERRA
SUSPERO
TAPIA
TAPIA
TAZA
TREVINO
TRUJILLO
TUBA
TYCHA
TYOCHIA
UMADA
VALENTIN
VALENTIN
VALENZUELA
VALENZUELA
VALENZUELA
VALENZUELA
VALENZUELA
VEGA
VERDUGO
VILLA
VILLANUEVA
YAMORO
ZAPAS
Rodolfo
Roberto
Alejandro
Alberto
Joshua
Alejandro
Juan
Ruben
Juan
Urdo
Patricia
Antonio
Antonio
Jorge
Lorenzo
Aurora
Francisco
Rernijo
Rehljio
Antonio
Hortencia
Edmundo
Petronilo
Carlos
Israel
Lydia
Alberto
Antonia
Marcelo
Soleda
Rafael
Francisco
Enriqueta
Hector
Herrninia
Lupe
Soccorro
Uservio
Concha
Tito
Felipe
Mercedes
Opaco
Carnelio
Manuel
Policarpio
Pato
Dario
Jesus
Julian
Vincente
Baza
Claudio
Rey
Flaco
Juan
Roberto
Valentin
David
Hector
Margarita
Lucero
Carlota
Francisco
Sam
Teodoro
David
Jesus
Maria
Oscar
Policarpio
Manuela
Pablo
Maria
John
Hortencia
Pedro
Benito
Jose
Antonio
Rita
Refugio
Alcario
Alfredo
Antonio
Ramon
Jose
Fernando
Gloria
Manuela
Percilano
Gilberto
Jorge
Lupe
Manuela
Gordo
Epifania
Ismo
Juanita
Isabel
Petronilo
Reynaldo
Lorenzo
Laura
Josea
Calo
Don
Nile
Benita
Juan
Eugenio
Faustino
Florencia
Jose
Jesus
Maria
Julio
Nicleto
Beatrice
Agnella
Pablo
Amparo
Pedro
Beto
Argelia
Eduardo
Clara
Tillia
Adelina
Alejandro
Pablo
Cholo
Guillermo
Genoviva
Jose
Jose
Julia
Lupe
Petra
Rey
Jose
File
Ramon
Eduardo
Mariana
Tata
Graciela
Francisco
Prudencia
Rafaela
Ricardo
Ignacia
Juan
Silverio
Dave
Norberto
Lorenzo
Nataniel
Gilberto
Tula
Consuelo
Petra
Raymundo
Rafael
Ramon
Juana
Concepcion
Guillermo
Juan
Yolanda
Blas
Juan
Carmen
Michael
Luz
Michael
Fraile
Rebulo
Carlos
Ignacia
Maria
Mercedes
Serapio
Julian
Juan
Roberto
Fernando
Tuspi
Alvino
Partial list of names buried in the Fry Pioneer Cemetery
7thStreet
6thStreet
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
15
14
16
1. Margaret Jeanne "Maggie" Fry Corona
2. Kathleen Ann Fry Redding
3. Lillian Skeels Fry
4. Raymond Paul Fry
5. Cora Belle Fry Stanley
6. Anthony Oliver Stanley
7. Zelda Cecilia Stanley
8. Ronald James Clark
9. Oliver Fry
10. Cecil David Fry
11. Elizabeth Ruth Fry Cathcart
12. Arden Henry Fry
13. Agnes H. Fry
14. Minnie Kneton Fry
15. Jose L. Perez
16. Maria Garcia Gibson
13
17
18
17 & 18 - Unknown
Fry Pioneer Cemetery N
ToRt.90
ToFryBlvd.
gate gate
Property Line
Property Line
PropertyLine
PropertyLine
Caution is advised as
to the accuracy of this
map.
Fry Pioneer Cemetery
Highlighted numbers
are all duplicate
numbers.
Margaret Jeanne "Maggie" Fry Corona
Margaret Jeanne "Maggie" Fry Corona Kathleen Ann Fry Redding
Kathleen Ann Fry Redding
Sisters
RAYMOND PAUL FRY
CORA BELLE FRY STANLEY
ANTHONY OLIVER STANLEY ZELDA CECILIA STANLEY
RONALD JAMES CLARK OLIVER FRY
CECIL DAVID FRY ELIZABETH RUTH CATHCART FRY
ARDEN HENRY FRY AGNES H. FRY
MARIA GARCIA GIBSON
JOSE L. PEREZ JOSE L. PEREZ
http://www.arizonaguide.com/arizona-feature-articles/boots-saddles-the-old-west-lives-on-in-sierra-vista
Boots & Saddles: The Old West Lives on in Sierra Vista
Waymarking.com
http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WMHEQ7_Fry_Pioneer_Cemetery_Sierra_Vista_Arizona
Sierra Vista Herald - National Historic Site status official for Fry Pioneer Cemetery
http://www.svherald.com/content/news/2011/07/29/215628
Fry Pioneer Cemetery Designated as State Historic Site
http://www.visitsierravista.com/newspopup.cfm?id=7312
Access Genealogy
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/arizona/fry-cemetery-records-fry-cochise-county-arizona.htm
National Park Service
http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NRHP/Text/08001312.pdf
Knights from Council 4584
http://www.koc4584.org/index.php/news/completed-activities/156-dedication-ceremony
https://www.svherald.com/content/amanda-baillie-executive-director-sierra-vista-area-chamber-commerce/2009/09/19/28580
Sierra Vista Herald - Fry Cemetery committee hopes to collect $30,000
Sierra Vista Herald - Fry Cemetery owner: Land sale was OK with her uncle
http://ip-50-62-143-220.ip.secureserver.net/content/amanda-baillie-executive-director-sierra-vista-area-chamber-commerce/2009/09/19/39317
Free Republic - Cemetery precious to three Sierra Vista men
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1741282/replies?c=2
Sierra Vista Herald - Fry Pioneer Cemetery Designated as State Historic Site
http://www.visitsierravista.com/newspopup.cfm?id=7312
Sierra Vista Historical Society
http://svhsaz.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/08NovNewsletter.pdf
http://www.uscemeteryproj2.com/arizona/cochise/fry/fry.htm
The United States Cemeteries Project
Internet References

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  • 2. Contents: Preface - Victoria Yarbrough History of Fry Pioneer Cemetery - Thomas C Shupert Partial list of names buried in the Fry Pioneer Cemetery Aerial photo with names Map Markers Internet references
  • 3. Fry Pioneer Cemetery Historical Background Thomas C Shupert- Chairman Fry Pioneer Cemetery Preservation Committee The Fry Pioneer Cemetery, as it is now known, is located between Sixth Street and Seventh Street, about one-half block north of Fry Boulevard; a major east-west artery in the rapidly growing city of Sierra Vista, Arizona. It is one mile east of the main gate of Fort Huachuca, a post that has been in almost continuous use since it began as a military camp in 1877. The Cemetery is located within the SE 1/4 of the SE 1/4 Section 34, Township 21 South, Range 20 East of the Gila and Salt River Meridian, Cochise County, Arizona at an elevation of 4598 feet above sea level. Fry Boulevard lies along the South line of Section 34, with 7th Street along the East line. The cemetery site is part of the Oliver Fry homestead of 280 acres, which covered all of the SE 1/4 of said Section 34 and E 1/2 of the SW 'A and the SW 1/4 of Section 35 adjoining on the East (across 7th Street). The patent for the homestead from the United States of America was dated August 11, 1916 and recorded September 26, 1916 in Book 66 of Deeds of Real Estate, page 144, records of Cochise County, Arizona. Erwin Fry and Lillian S. Fry, his wife, designated the cemetery as "RESERVED" in Block 9 on the subdivision plat of FIRST ADDITION TO THE TOWNSITE OF FRY recorded January 13, 1955 in Book 3 of Maps, page 127, records of Cochise County, Arizona. The original "RESERVED" parcel is shown as 180 feet North and South, and 265 feet East and West, bounded by 7th Street on the East, 6th Street on the West, with the South line being 350 feet North of the original platted North line of Fry Boulevard. Lots 3 and 10 of Block 9 are adjacent on the South, with Lots 4 and 9 of the said Block on the North Side. The East 10 feet of the "RESERVED" parcel was dedicated to the County of Cochise for the purpose of a public roadway in 1978 by Deed of Dedication recorded in Docket 1265, page 23, records of Cochise County, Arizona. The cemetery, approximately one-half acre in size, is on relatively flat ground with a number of native trees and a few bushes. A chain link fence surrounds the property. Inside the fence, there is a 3-ft. brick wall, 60 x 144 ft., which encloses thirteen Fry family graves, all with permanent headstones. One hundred ninety-nine persons are buried outside the wall-enclosed portion. Only two of these outer graves have existing markers, and the two others are outlined with stones. The lack of tombstones is due to the fact that many families who buried here could not afford to erect a permanent marker, or to acts of vandalism over the years. In 1956, the name of Fry, Arizona, was changed to Sierra Vista, which means "Mountain View" in Spanish. A growing city with a 2005 population of almost 42,000, Sierra Vista serves as the business and cultural center of Cochise County, and a regional center for southeastern Arizona. It is surrounded by three mountain ranges - the Huachuca, the Dragoon and the Mule - and it is bordered to the east by the San Pedro River. Located about twenty miles north of the international boundary between the United States and Mexico, Sierra Vista shares its 131 square miles with its former neighbor and progenitor, Fort Huachuca, which it annexed in 1971. Sierra Vista's history and that of its predecessor, Fry, Arizona, began in 1877 when Fort Huachuca was established as a camp, and later, a fort. Sited against a scenic backdrop of the Huachuca Mountains, the post during the course of the "Apache Wars" of the 1870s and 1880s was asked with vital missions in the remote frontier that was southern Arizona at the time. They were to control Indian disturbances, to patrol the international boundary line, to facilitate construction of a regional railroad network, and to protect the settlers whose numbers grew after the discovery of silver at Tombstone.
  • 4. Danger from Apaches became a thing of the past after Geronimo surrendered in the late 1880s, and most of Arizona's military posts were closed. Fort Huachuca, however, was retained because of continuing border troubles. In 1913, the all-black 10th Cavalry, the famous "Buffalo Soldiers", arrived at Fort Huachuca where they remained for the next twenty years. They accompanied General John J. Pershing into Mexico on his Punitive Expedition, an unsuccessful attempt to capture Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa. When Pershing went on to France after the U.S. entered the war, the Buffalo Soldiers continued to maintain border security. Fort Huachuca's usefulness lasted through the 1920's and 1930's. During World War II, thirty thousand troops were stationed there, at a post that had been considered in the 1930's to be adequate for only 10,000 men. When World War II was over, Fort Huachuca was declared surplus property and was turned over to the state of Arizona. But in only a few years it was reactivated by Army Engineers during the Korean Conflict. Since the 1950's, when southeastern Arizona was discovered to be an ideal climate for communications efforts, Fort Huachuca's importance has steadily climbed. Today, a major player in the national defense picture, the installation has been home to the U.S. Army Strategic Communications Command, the U.S. Army intelligence Center and School, the U.S. Army Information Systems Command, and at the present time, the U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command, along with other commands and services. In its origin, Fort Huachuca was the reason for the existence of Fry and other settlements nearby. Today, Fort Huachuca is a part of the expanding urban scene that was Garden Canyon, or Buena, or Fry but today is Sierra Vista. The changes have been many; the post slogan aptly illustrates Fort Huachuca's history, past and present: "From sabers to satellites". When Oliver Fry first came to the general area called Garden Canyon, referring to one of the several beautiful canyons in that part of the Huachuca Mountains, he saw the economic opportunities for a farmer and rancher such as himself who could supply goods and services to the nearby military installation. In June 1912, he med for a homestead patent, approximately one mile east of the main gate of Fort Huachuca. In November, Oliver and his two sons, Tom and Erwin, seventeen and fifteen respectively, came from their home in Texas with a freight car full of supplies. After finishing the construction of a large, two-room house, Oliver sent for the rest of the family, who arrived in January of 1913 . At this time, Oliver and his wife, Elizabeth, had nine children: Tom, Cora, Erwin, Edna, Raymond, Cecil, Arden, Alice and Agnes. Their last child, June, was born in 1914. There were other settlers in the area, but no schools had been established. In February 1913, Fry had a well dug on his homestead, then decided to operate a small store in his home. This was one of the first general stores in that part of the county and may well have been the start of the Fry family's influence in the community. Approximately five miles east of the main gate of Fort Huachuca, another small community was developing, near the present intersection of Highways 90 and 92. The residents called the vicinity Buena (Spanish for "good"). The first school opened there in 1 91 5 . The first graduating class of eighth-graders, in 1916 , included Erwin and Edna Fry among the five graduates. As the Fry family settled into life near the military post, Erwin, Oliver's second son, got a job with a man who butchered meat for the soldiers at Fort Huachuca. The butcher gave the young man "the livers and hearts and other pieces of meat to take home".
  • 5. His mother then made mincemeat to sell at the store. They also sold eggs and milk from their farm, as well as supplies they shipped from Benson, thirty miles to the north. Edna and Raymond were in charge of the dairy operation, which provided milk and cream to Fort Huachuca. As the ten Fry children became adults and married, they were active in the growing community just outside the gates of Fort Huachuca. Two sons, Tom and Cecil, were school bus drivers and Cecil became a teacher in the neighboring Buena School. Much has been written about Cecil and many of those interviewed remembered Cecil and thought highly of him. However, it was Erwin who emerged as the family entrepreneur. He expanded the land holdings, operated several businesses and created the Fry Townsite. Erwin married Lillian Rice on December 25 ,1923. Lillian, who had been a teacher at the Buena School, began working in the Garden Canyon General Store and Post Office in 1929. She became the postmistress in 1937 or 1938 (there Is a conflict in reported dates). Within one year of this event, Oliver, Erwin and Lillian Fry opened their own store on what is known today as Fry Boulevard. They transferred the post office with them to the new store. As was often the custom when a new building or store was built and opened, the persons owning the building put their names on it. Thus, the community that had been called Garden Canyon became known as Fry Arizona. The community was known as Fry Arizona from the mid - to late - 1930's until 1956, at which time the community was incorporated and the name Sierra Vista was chosen. It is reported that Erwin Fry was opposed to the incorporation process and did not want the name changed. This caused some hard feelings, which continued for many years. The Townsite of Fry still exists as an enclave of Cochise County, within the City of Sierra Vista. The Fry Cemetery is in Fry Townsite, but is now the property of the City of Sierra Vista. The Fry home and store were located on what is today Fry Boulevard. Both structures were destroyed by fire - the store in 1961, and the home in 1991 . The Fry Cemetery is the only remaining site of the Oliver Fry homestead and the Fry family heritage. It is unknown if Fry formally dedicated the burial ground as a cemetery; however, he and his kin were committed to preserving the plot of land as a family cemetery and the adjacent area as a burial ground for those known to the Fry family. This graveyard was the only known cemetery in the vicinity from 1919 until 1961, when Cochise Memory Gardens was established on Charleston Road near Sierra Vista. According to anecdotal evidence, the area of the Fry Cemetery, perhaps, was used for burials before the arrival of the Fry family, possibly as early as the 1880's. It was also said that Oliver Fry located the cemetery in its present place because the caliche ground there was unsuitable for raising crops. The first burial in the Fry Cemetery was that of Oliver Fry's wife, Elizabeth "Lizzie" Ruth Cathcart Fry, who died on December 25,1919. She was forty-nine years old. Her death certificate identifies her place of burial as "Fry Homestead". Mrs. Fry's community property interest in the homestead was distributed to her ten children. Later, in 1940, her title ownership, along with Oliver's, was merged into that of their son, Erwin Fry and his wife Lillian S. Fry. Oliver himself did not die until 1959, at the age of eighty-eight. Between 1927 and 1974, four of Oliver and Elizabeth's children were laid to rest in the family plot: Arden Henry Fry, Cora Belle Fry Stanley, Agnes H. Fry and Cecil David Fry. Oliver Fry's second wife, Minnie Kneton Fry was interred there, also, along with several family members, including grandchildren.
  • 6. Surrounding the Fry family plot lay the remains of almost two hundred others known to be mainly Hispanic, but including some Anglos and a number of Yaqui Indians. Each of the deceased family members has a marker, but the majority of the graves outside the brick wall are unmarked. There is an existing burial list, but many buried here are "known but to God". According to affidavits of descendants of a number of those buried in the general cemetery, those burials were permitted by the Fry family. Due to the lack of funds, the majority of the graves had wooden markers or were left unmarked. Their locations were attested to by surviving members of the families. Most of the markers had been removed over the years, according to Rosa Leonard, a descendant of several people buried in the cemetery. In 1961, the Fry family erected a brick wall around their plot to protect it from grazing cattle. A chain link fence was erected around the,whole cemetery, which then prevented family members from taking care of their own plots. Ignacio "Nacho" M. Valenzuela, another descendant of those buried in the cemetery, stated that most of those buried in the cemetery either worked for the Fry family, or were family members of the laborers. Some of the women buried in the cemetery worked as domestics or in stores owned by local businessmen. When asked about the reason that most of the burials outside of the Fry Cemetery walls were non-Anglos, Fern McReynolds, of Hatfield Funeral Home in Sierra Vista stated that before 1961 no mortuary operated in the immediate area, so many locals were buried in Bisbee or Tombstone cemeteries. Most non-Anglos could not afford the expense of funerals in other towns. Many also lacked the means to transport their loved ones from this area. Jose Luis Perez, a Hispanic veteran of World War II, has a military marker at his grave. His was one of the later burials - 1963. Perez was an uncle of several of those who presented affidavits that many graves are located outside the boundaries of the Fry family plot. A number of young Hispanics from this area served in the military, with very little recognition, but with a great amount of pride. According to Fr. Gregory Adolf of St. Andrew the Apostle Roman Catholic Church in Sierra Vista, the parishioners of the area were served by priests from the Parish of Our Lady of Lourdes in Benson (approximately thirty miles northeast of Sierra Vista) and Sacred Heart Parish in Tombstone (approximately sixteen miles from Sierra Vista) during the period from 1890 to 1957. Therefore, parish statistics of the early residents are not in the archives of St. Andrews Parish, which was founded in 1958. In addition, because of the distance for priests to travel, as well as the short time that usually elapsed between an individuals death and burials, not all local burials were recorded. "Devout laypersons read the burial prayers in the absence of a priest, and thus accorded the deceased a Catholic burial, although unrecorded" (Adolph, 1999). Written histories of towns and cities may limit their scope to those who shaped their communities and made names for themselves. They seldom mention those who worked for the "movers and shakers", but who were as much a foundation of the present community of Sierra Vista as were their employers. The preservation of the Fry Pioneer Cemetery pays tribute not only to the Fry family, but also to those individuals who were so important to the area. Some of their families can be traced back four or five generations, as early migrants from Mexico. Without the numerous Hispanics and Yaqui Indians serving as the labor force in the early years of this community, Sierra Vista might not have become the thriving city it is today. The Fry Pioneer Cemetery is one of the last pieces of evidence of the origins of the community; it is imperative that it be preserved for posterity and for the future generations of this area. It is an important piece of history.
  • 7. AGUILAR AGUIRRIA ALCONTAR ALVARADO ANIZA BALDENEGRO BALLESTERO BASTA BASTITA BAUTISTA BENAVIDEZ BENSELDO BIAS BLAS BOJORQUEZ BUSTARNANTE CABALLERO CABORCA CALENDARIO CAMPOS CAMPOS CANDELA CARANZA CARDENEZ CARDENEZ CARNE CARRILLO CARRILLO CARTER CASTANEDA CASTANEDA CASTILLO CASTILLO CASTORENA CASTRO CASTRO CASTRO CASTRO CASTRO CERRANO CERRO CERROS CHALUPA CHALUPA CHAPAS CHAVEZ CHAVEZ COIMOS CONCERTO CONTRERAS CORALES CORONADO COSIO COUCHES COVASIO DARIO DIAZ DIEGO DURAN ESPINOSA ESPINOSA ESTRELLA FARRA FERNANDEZ FERNANDEZ FOSTER GALINDO GARZA GARCIA GARCIA GARCIA GARCIA GARZA GARZA GIBSON GILBERT GONZALES GUENOFASIO GUIEDO GUTIERREZ HERNANDEZ HERNANDEZ INEZ LAGUNA LAGUNA LAGUNA LAGUNA LEON LOBATO LOBATO LOBATO LOBATO LOPEZ MALDONADO MALDONADO MALDONADO MARCOS MARTINEZ MARTINEZ MARTINEZ MEDA MENDEZ MENDEZ MIRA MIRANDA MOLINA MONTANO MONTECARLO MONTENEZ MONTEREY MONTES MORENO MORENO MORENO MORGAS MOYES MOYES MUNGUIA MUNGUIA NACOSARI NASTASIO NEZ NOPALES NOGALES NORIEGA OBISPO OBISPO OBREGON PACO PANZ A PARRA PARRA PATADIALA PERALTA PEREZ PEREZ PEREZ PEREZ PEREZ PEREZ PEREZ PLANCHA PLANO QUIJADA QUINTERO QUINTERO RILO RIVERA RODRIQUEZ RODRIQUEZ RODRIQUEZ RODRIQUEZ ROMAN ROMAN ROMAN RONQUILLO RUIZ SALVADOR SALVADOR SANCHEZ SANCHEZ SANTANA SANTANA SANTANA SEPULVEDA SEPULVEDA SIERRA SUSPERO TAPIA TAPIA TAZA TREVINO TRUJILLO TUBA TYCHA TYOCHIA UMADA VALENTIN VALENTIN VALENZUELA VALENZUELA VALENZUELA VALENZUELA VALENZUELA VEGA VERDUGO VILLA VILLANUEVA YAMORO ZAPAS Rodolfo Roberto Alejandro Alberto Joshua Alejandro Juan Ruben Juan Urdo Patricia Antonio Antonio Jorge Lorenzo Aurora Francisco Rernijo Rehljio Antonio Hortencia Edmundo Petronilo Carlos Israel Lydia Alberto Antonia Marcelo Soleda Rafael Francisco Enriqueta Hector Herrninia Lupe Soccorro Uservio Concha Tito Felipe Mercedes Opaco Carnelio Manuel Policarpio Pato Dario Jesus Julian Vincente Baza Claudio Rey Flaco Juan Roberto Valentin David Hector Margarita Lucero Carlota Francisco Sam Teodoro David Jesus Maria Oscar Policarpio Manuela Pablo Maria John Hortencia Pedro Benito Jose Antonio Rita Refugio Alcario Alfredo Antonio Ramon Jose Fernando Gloria Manuela Percilano Gilberto Jorge Lupe Manuela Gordo Epifania Ismo Juanita Isabel Petronilo Reynaldo Lorenzo Laura Josea Calo Don Nile Benita Juan Eugenio Faustino Florencia Jose Jesus Maria Julio Nicleto Beatrice Agnella Pablo Amparo Pedro Beto Argelia Eduardo Clara Tillia Adelina Alejandro Pablo Cholo Guillermo Genoviva Jose Jose Julia Lupe Petra Rey Jose File Ramon Eduardo Mariana Tata Graciela Francisco Prudencia Rafaela Ricardo Ignacia Juan Silverio Dave Norberto Lorenzo Nataniel Gilberto Tula Consuelo Petra Raymundo Rafael Ramon Juana Concepcion Guillermo Juan Yolanda Blas Juan Carmen Michael Luz Michael Fraile Rebulo Carlos Ignacia Maria Mercedes Serapio Julian Juan Roberto Fernando Tuspi Alvino Partial list of names buried in the Fry Pioneer Cemetery
  • 8. 7thStreet 6thStreet 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 15 14 16 1. Margaret Jeanne "Maggie" Fry Corona 2. Kathleen Ann Fry Redding 3. Lillian Skeels Fry 4. Raymond Paul Fry 5. Cora Belle Fry Stanley 6. Anthony Oliver Stanley 7. Zelda Cecilia Stanley 8. Ronald James Clark 9. Oliver Fry 10. Cecil David Fry 11. Elizabeth Ruth Fry Cathcart 12. Arden Henry Fry 13. Agnes H. Fry 14. Minnie Kneton Fry 15. Jose L. Perez 16. Maria Garcia Gibson 13 17 18 17 & 18 - Unknown Fry Pioneer Cemetery N ToRt.90 ToFryBlvd. gate gate Property Line Property Line PropertyLine PropertyLine
  • 9. Caution is advised as to the accuracy of this map. Fry Pioneer Cemetery Highlighted numbers are all duplicate numbers.
  • 10. Margaret Jeanne "Maggie" Fry Corona Margaret Jeanne "Maggie" Fry Corona Kathleen Ann Fry Redding Kathleen Ann Fry Redding Sisters
  • 11. RAYMOND PAUL FRY CORA BELLE FRY STANLEY ANTHONY OLIVER STANLEY ZELDA CECILIA STANLEY RONALD JAMES CLARK OLIVER FRY CECIL DAVID FRY ELIZABETH RUTH CATHCART FRY
  • 12. ARDEN HENRY FRY AGNES H. FRY MARIA GARCIA GIBSON JOSE L. PEREZ JOSE L. PEREZ
  • 13. http://www.arizonaguide.com/arizona-feature-articles/boots-saddles-the-old-west-lives-on-in-sierra-vista Boots & Saddles: The Old West Lives on in Sierra Vista Waymarking.com http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WMHEQ7_Fry_Pioneer_Cemetery_Sierra_Vista_Arizona Sierra Vista Herald - National Historic Site status official for Fry Pioneer Cemetery http://www.svherald.com/content/news/2011/07/29/215628 Fry Pioneer Cemetery Designated as State Historic Site http://www.visitsierravista.com/newspopup.cfm?id=7312 Access Genealogy http://www.accessgenealogy.com/arizona/fry-cemetery-records-fry-cochise-county-arizona.htm National Park Service http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NRHP/Text/08001312.pdf Knights from Council 4584 http://www.koc4584.org/index.php/news/completed-activities/156-dedication-ceremony https://www.svherald.com/content/amanda-baillie-executive-director-sierra-vista-area-chamber-commerce/2009/09/19/28580 Sierra Vista Herald - Fry Cemetery committee hopes to collect $30,000 Sierra Vista Herald - Fry Cemetery owner: Land sale was OK with her uncle http://ip-50-62-143-220.ip.secureserver.net/content/amanda-baillie-executive-director-sierra-vista-area-chamber-commerce/2009/09/19/39317 Free Republic - Cemetery precious to three Sierra Vista men http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1741282/replies?c=2 Sierra Vista Herald - Fry Pioneer Cemetery Designated as State Historic Site http://www.visitsierravista.com/newspopup.cfm?id=7312 Sierra Vista Historical Society http://svhsaz.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/08NovNewsletter.pdf http://www.uscemeteryproj2.com/arizona/cochise/fry/fry.htm The United States Cemeteries Project Internet References