As urban green spaces dwindle, spirits are rising from historic graveyards like Atlanta’s Oakland Cemetery, where you’re as likely to see a Gullah folk dance or a bit of theater as a tomb or an ornate monument. Indeed, in a return to a Victorian custom, this venerated city of the dead is quite the happening place for the living.
“We want people to come visit,” says Marcy Breffle, education manager at Oakland, one of Atlanta’s oldest historic sites. Scavenger hunts, music festivals, art shows, plant sales, tours, and even a 5K run lure the public to explore the lively necropolis.
A virtual who’s who of artistic, social, commercial, sporting, and political elite rest side by side with paupers and unknown early citizens in the parcel of more than 70,000 interred.…