The graves of Richard and Catherine Dotson under Runway 10 at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport

The Mystery Buried Under the Savannah Airport

Have you heard the joke about the small, single-engine plane that crashed in a cemetery? Rescue workers have uncovered more than 2,000 bodies—and they’re still working.

Yes, we know. It’s the kind of punchline that gets groans at family reunions and polite chuckles at funeral director conventions. But at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport, that gag hits the tarmac running. At that modern, bustling airport, smack dab in the middle of Runway 10, you’ll find a couple of eternal travelers who really took the idea of family burial plots to new heights.

These are not metaphorical graves — the kind all of us feel we are in during those endless layovers. These are literal, stone-marked, FAA-cleared resting places for two permanent airport occupants who will never get reunited with their lost luggage. Who are they? And how did their final resting place end up under 9,350 feet of reinforced runway concrete? Buckle up. We’re about to do a little ghost-tour-meets-air-traffic-control dive into Savannah’s strangest graveyard tour.

The Dotsons: Pioneers of Cherokee Hills

Back in the days before security checkpoints and $8 airport coffees, the land beneath the Savannah airport was peaceful countryside known as Cherokee Hills. Richard and Catherine Dotson, born in 1797, were early settlers who farmed this land, raised their family, and pretty much minded their own business.

When Catherine passed in 1877 and Richard in 1884, they were buried on their own land, per the very reasonable 19th-century assumption that bulldozers and Boeing 737s would never be an issue.

From Farmland to Flight Path: The Transformation Begins

Fast forward to the early 1940s. The world was at war, airplanes were suddenly everywhere, and the U.S. War Department had big plans. Savannah, with its charming Southern location and open spaces, seemed like a great place to plop down an airfield. In 1942, a lease was drawn up for 1,100 acres—including the Dotson family land—and that’s when things started taxiing toward weirdness.

Ever lose a Founding Father? Turns out we may have misplaced America’s first president.

When the runways were mapped out, one small hiccup emerged: the Dotson family cemetery sat right in the way. Over 100 graves—mostly family members, but also some slaves who worked for the family—were tucked into a patch of land that was about to become prime taxiway real estate. The government offered to move everyone to Bonaventure Cemetery. Many families agreed.

A Family’s Stand: Honoring Ancestral Wishes

Not everyone was keen on relocating their deceased kin. When it came to Richard and Catherine, their descendants dug in their heels and said the couple should stay put. The land was theirs. They’d worked it, lived on it, and by golly, they could be buried under it—even if the ground above was going to be frequented by Delta flights and luggage carts.

While the other graves were respectfully relocated, the Dotsons remained—and would soon become the only known pair of 19th-century farmers with front-row seats to every takeoff and landing.

Runway 10: A Unique Intersection of Past and Present

The graves of Richard and Catherine Dotson under Runway 10 at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport
The graves of Richard and Catherine Dotson under Runway 10 at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport

When Runway 10 was extended west during WWII, the airport did something unthinkable: they just… built over the graves. To this day, the Dotsons remain six feet under, but “under” also means that they have a steady stream of aircraft taking off and landing directly over them. Two grave markers are still visible, sunk into the runway, quietly reminding us of a couple of folks who lived out their days on that land.

More Than Meets the Eye: Additional Graves Nearby

They’re not entirely alone, though. Off to the side, two other Dotson family members—Daniel Hueston and John Dotson—are also buried near the runway. Less visible, but equally persistent in their refusal to give up real estate, even to Uncle Sam.

A Global Rarity: Graves in Active Runways

Daniel Hueston’s grave near an active runway at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport
The grave of Daniel Hueston.

Savannah/Hilton Head may be the only airport in the world where you can literally land over a graveyard. That’s not hyperbole—it’s runway policy. These graves are part of active airspace and even show up in FAA documentation. For frequent fliers, it’s a humbling reminder that some folks really do take their frequent flyer status to the grave.

Echoes of the Past: Tales and Legends

Savannah is famous for its ghost stories. Ask anyone who’s taken a ghost tour or stayed in a 200-year-old inn with questionable plumbing. So it’s no surprise that the Dotson graves have become part of local lore. There are whispers of strange shadows, flickering runway lights, and pilots who swear they’ve seen more than just ground crew out there. Ghosts? Glitches? Maybe just two very determined grandparents making sure no one forgets them.

Final Approach: Reflecting on the Journey

So the next time your flight touches down at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport, take a moment. As the wheels screech against the asphalt and the spoilers deploy, remember that beneath you lies not just concrete and runway lights—but two farmers who chose to stay put, airport expansion or not. And who, depending on who you believe, might just be watching your landing with mild, ghostly amusement.


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One response to “Rest In Flight: The Bizarre Tale of the Graves Beneath the Savannah Airport”

  1. Savannah may be one of the few places in the U.S. that can compete with New Orleans for colorful history and number of ghosts per square foot.

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