Civic Education’s Lasting Value:
Students Mark a Revolutionary War Veteran’s Grave
By Paul LaRue, America 250 Ohio, K-12 Education Co-Chair

More than twenty years ago, my students at Washington Court House High School began a civic education project marking the unmarked graves of veterans with headstones from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The graves of the veterans were either unmarked or their headstones had been destroyed. The idea for this project began while I was giving my students a tour of our local cemetery. I was showing a section in our cemetery with several unmarked graves of veterans when a student asked, “Don’t these men deserve better?”


In 2005 we began working in the nearby Bloomingburg Cemetery. My students discovered the grave of a Revolutionary War veteran whose headstone had been destroyed. Prior to this discovery, the graves of veterans we had marked were primarily Black Civil War veterans. My students used resources like a map of the cemetery from the Works Progress Administration, and developed a system to calculate the location of an unmarked grave by using the position of existing headstones. My students researched, ordered, and installed a headstone from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for Revolutionary War veteran John Klever.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs sent a film crew to document my students work for a segment for their news magazine The American Veteran. Over the course of a decade, my students researched, ordered, and installed more than seventy headstones in six cemeteries, primarily in rural southern Ohio. We honored the graves of veterans from the American Revolution through World War I.
Twenty years have passed since my students’ headstone project in Bloomingburg. We are now commemorating America 250. Civic engagement projects, like marking the unmarked graves of veterans, demonstrates the lasting value of engaging students with their communities. This segment shows my students in action. It was our honor to mark the graves of these forgotten heroes.