Historic Burial Places Preservation Act

Historic Burial Places Preservation Act

Source: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Historic Burial Places Preservation Act, Act of 1994, P.L. 141, No. 22.

AN ACT providing for the preservation of historic burial places and tombs, monuments and gravestones; and imposing penalties.

The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania hereby enacts as follows:

Section 1. Short title.

This act shall be known and may be cited as the Historic Burial Places Preservation Act.

Section 2. Definitions.

The following words and phrases when used in this act shall have the meanings given to them in this section unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:

  • “Burial ground authority.” An individual, municipality, ecclesiastical society, cemetery association or other entity which has charge of a historic burial place.
  • “Historic burial lot.” An individual burial site within a historic burial place.
  • “Historic burial place.” A tract of land that has been in existence as a burial ground for more than 100 years wherein there have been no burials for at least 50 years and wherein there will be no future burials or listed in or eligible for the National Register of Historic Places as determined by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.
  • “Tomb.” A vault containing the remains of a deceased person.

Section 3. Restriction on alienation and use of historic burial places.

  1. Restriction.–No municipality shall alienate or condemn through eminent
    domain proceedings a historic burial place or appropriate a historic burial
    place to any use other than that of a burial ground. No portion of any such
    burial place shall be taken for public use without the approval of the
    Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Should such approval not be
    granted within a time period, not to exceed one year from the date approval
    was sought, approval shall be sought from the General Assembly.
  2. Record of removal.–If any historic burial place is appropriated for any
    other use and the tombs, monuments, gravestones or other memorials are
    removed from it, the burial ground authority shall preserve a record of the
    removal indicating the date of the removal and the site or place to which
    the removal was made. The authority shall send copies of such records to the
    recorder of deeds in the county in which the burial place is located and to
    the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.

Section 4. Restrictions on removal of tombs, monuments, etc.

  1. General Rule.–No fence, tomb, monument or gravestone or fragment
    thereof within a historic burial place shall be destroyed. No fence, tomb,
    monument or gravestone or fragment thereof within any historic burial place
    shall be removed except in accordance with the provisions of this section.
  2. Procedure or lawful removal.–A gravestone or other memorial for the
    dead may be removed for the purpose of repair or replacement, reproduction
    or preservation and display in an accredited museum with:

    1. the consent of the owner of the historic burial lot in which the
      gravestone or memorial is placed or the consent of a lineal descendant of
      the deceased or, if such owner or lineal descendant is unknown, the consent
      of the burial ground authority; and
    2. an order of the court of common pleas of the county in which the
      historic burial place is located.
  • Court order for removal.–Upon written application of the consenting
    owner, lineal descendant or burial ground authority, the court of common
    pleas may, after a hearing, with notice of the hearing having been given to
    interested parties and otherwise as the court deems appropriate, order the
    removal of the gravestone or memorial if it finds that the removal is
    necessary or desirable for the protection and preservation of the gravestone
    or memorial.
  • Section 5. Offenses.

    1. Destruction of tombs, monuments, gravestones, etc.–A person who,
      without authorization of the owner of a historic burial lot or a lineal
      descendant of the deceased or of the historic burial ground authority,
      commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if:
      1. he intentionally destroys, mutilates, defaces or removes any tomb,
        monument, gravestone or other structure or any portion or fragment thereof,
        placed or designed as a memorial for the dead, or any fence, railing, curb
        or other enclosure for the burial of the dead in a historic burial place; or
      2. he wantonly or maliciously disturbs the contents of any tomb or grave
        in a historic burial place.
    2. Unlawful possession of monuments, gravestones or certain other
      structures.–A person commits a misdemeanor of the second degree if he
      possesses or sells, offers for sale or attempts to sell or transfers or
      disposes of any monument, gravestone or other structure or any portion or
      fragment thereof, placed or designed for a memorial of the dead, knowing
      that it has been unlawfully removed from a historic burial place.

    Section 6. Effective date.

    This act shall take effect in 60 days.


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