WHEELOCK, Vt. — Residents in the Northeast Kingdom town of Wheelock are hoping to get together to reclaim some of its historic cemeteries from underbrush, saplings, weeds, grass and other debris. The project in the Vermont town is in the planning stage and the selectboard is working with the cemetery commissioners. They've also gotten offers of help from volunteers. They're hoping to have the first work session Sept. 20. The town of Wheelock was chartered in 1785 and Town Clerk _Doug Reid_ (http://www.mysanantonio.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&s earch=1&inlineLink=1&query="Doug+Reid") said some of those cemeteries are the final resting place of Revolutionary War-era residents. The Caledonian Record (http://bit.ly/1qKFNMU) reports that a stone marker below the _Wheelock Green_ (http://www.mysanantonio.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&search=1&inlineLink=1&query="Wheelock+Green") says, "Site of first burying place at Wheelock used as late as 1814. Two soldiers in the War of the Armed Rebellion rest here, one has a British bullet in him." Reid says the condition of the cemeteries vary with some being in "neat as a pin" while others are so overgrown and remote that it is not immediately apparent there is a cemetery at the location. Reid said it would be too expensive for the town to hire people to do the work, but members of a local church and other residents have volunteered to help.