Vandals damage several Grantsville City Cemetery headstones


Save Story
Leer en español

Estimated read time: 3-4 minutes

GRANTSVILLE — Residents are upset, hurt and wondering who vandalized several historic headstones in the city cemetery.

Police have jumped on the case as the city assesses if the family gravesites can be restored.

On Thursday, Susan Orifici and her mother, Madge Hogan, came to visit the gravesite of Orifici's late father and Hogan's late husband, Dean Hogan.

Walking up to his headstone in the Grantsville City Cemetery can bring out a lot of emotions. But on this day, the mom and daughter said they felt peaceful.

Orifici's grandbaby is buried right next to him, and her late sister's gravesite is also nearby.

"We feel our loved ones, you know, and, this is people's hearts," she said, looking down at the headstones.

But as the two looked up and around, they noticed something wrong with some of the other gravesites.

Sandstone headstones, a tribute to those who came before, had toppled over. Some were broken.

"It looks like someone with a lot of force come up and ran and pushed it over, or possibly hit it with a vehicle," Orifici said of one of the headstones that her mother discovered shattered into several pieces in the grass.

As they walked up to each broken headstone they discovered another, and then another.

"This was no accident," Orifici said. "This was definitely vandalism."

Susan Orifici stands over a broken headstone dating back to the late 1800s in Grantsville on Thursday.
Susan Orifici stands over a broken headstone dating back to the late 1800s in Grantsville on Thursday. (Photo: Lauren Steinbrecher, KSL-TV)

She immediately reported it to the city, and police opened an investigation.

Orifici runs a business cleaning and restoring headstones and knows many of the families whose loved ones are buried in the cemetery, like John Cook.

He and others began to arrive Thursday evening to see the damage.

"This was not broken like this before," Orifici said as she and Cook walked up to a headstone dating back to the late 1800s that was snapped in half. "This wasn't broken."

Cook could see that his family headstones were fine. But he was not.

"It just breaks my heart, because I'm 80 years old and I've got a wife that's buried here," he said. "And if they'd ever mess with my wife's headstone, I know I'd go crazy."

John Cook looks at a broken headstone with Susan Orifici, while other broken headstones can be seen in the background at the Grantsville City Cemetery in Grantsville on Thursday.
John Cook looks at a broken headstone with Susan Orifici, while other broken headstones can be seen in the background at the Grantsville City Cemetery in Grantsville on Thursday. (Photo: Lauren Steinbrecher, KSL-TV)

He and others wandered and wondered who would vandalize so many historic treasures and why.

"These headstones are like hundreds of years old, and you know, they're irreplaceable," Orifici said.

By the end of the evening, Orifici estimated that they pointed out about a dozen vandalized gravesites.

With headstones and hearts broken, they hoped to find who took all this family history away.

"If I was you, I would apologize to these families," she said. "I would come forth and try to make things right because this is just not acceptable."

Headstones sit damaged in the Grantsville City Cemetery in Grantsville on Thursday.
Headstones sit damaged in the Grantsville City Cemetery in Grantsville on Thursday. (Photo: Lauren Steinbrecher, KSL-TV)

Grantsville Mayor Neil Critchlow told KSL-TV that the city is going to keep cataloging which headstones were damaged and will remove them in hopes that some of them can be restored.

Orifici has offered her business, Precious Stones Monuments and Restoration, to work on what's now become a restoration project.

Critchlow also said police are investigating and will be patrolling the cemetery regularly.

Anyone with information on the vandalism should call Grantsville police at 435-884-6881.

Most recent Utah stories

Related topics

UtahPolice & CourtsTooele County
Lauren Steinbrecher
Lauren Steinbrecher is an Emmy award-winning reporter and multimedia journalist who joined KSL in December 2021.

STAY IN THE KNOW

Get informative articles and interesting stories delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe to the KSL.com Trending 5.
By subscribing, you acknowledge and agree to KSL.com's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

KSL Weather Forecast