Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Wednesday’s child: Rebecca and Harriet



So far, I have found no photo of this grave marker before the statue was broken. Even so, I cannot look at this weathered marker without hearing the whisper of a small voice: Now I lay me down to sleep.

CHILDREN of
Wm. & Susan
WILCOX.


REBECCA A.
DIED
Oct. 18, 1862
AGED
2Ys. 1Mo. 18D.


HARRIET E.
DIED
Apr. 8 1869
AGED
2 Mos. 7 D





Sandy Corners Cemetery, Franklin County, Ohio

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Wednesday’s child: Edna




EDNA
Dau. of Oren & Ella
POPPLETON
DIED
AUG. 4, 1877
AGED 17 D.
-----
Budded on earth
to bloom in Heaven

Stones with bas-relief doves are not uncommon in old cemeteries with 19th century stones, but this life-sized statue of a dead dove was the first I had seen in person. The imagery is striking.

Edna’s parents are buried nearby: Ella Poppleton (b. 1855, d. 1945) and Oren Poppleton (b. 1856, d. 1920).



Cheshire Cemetery, Delaware County, Ohio

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Every day is Tombstone Tuesday at Gravestoned

Just a reminder that every day is Tombstone Tuesday here at Gravestoned. Today’s marker is from Oller Cemetery in Delaware County, Ohio: Sarah.

Someday soon I will visit Oller again to try the aluminum foil method to read, or rather attempt to read, the full inscription on Sarah’s marker. Wish me luck!

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Nine years of nature

On a recent visit to Sandy Corners Cemetery in Dublin, Ohio, I stopped at the grave markers for the Davis family. There were two weathered obelisks, one for H. Davis (d. 1878) and one for his wife, Sarah (d. 1877).

Between the tall markers was a small, damaged stone that was difficult to read. In fact, I could not even make out the name, but based on the few lines I could read, I understood it to be the marker for a daughter of H. and Sarah. I snapped a picture, hoping to figure out the details of the inscription after transferring the image to my computer.

No such luck.

No matter how much I zoomed or enhanced my photo of Unknown Davis, I could not read the name. On top of that, the line revealing age at death was completely missing. Time for plan B: Search the Internet for another source of the gravestone inscription.

Bingo! Her name was Loria.

I found a photo of the white marble marker, easily read, on Leona Gustafson’s website, a site I had visited many times before. The big chip had been missing from the top of the marker when this photo was taken, but there was little lichen (moss? algae?) on the stone. David Gustafson took the photo in 2001.

Leona and David Gustafson have photographed and transcribed thousands of gravestones in abandoned and inactive cemeteries in and around Franklin County, Ohio, preserving valuable information for generations to come. In a 2002 article in The Columbus Dispatch, Leona said, “Every one of them, eventually, will be gone.”

Take time to explore Leona’s website: http://www.genealogybug.net/Franklin_Cemeteries/. 




Thank you to Leona and David Gustafson for permission to post the 2001 photo of Loria’s marker.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Wednesday’s child: Clara


CLARA
Dau. of G. &
N. LEASURE
Died
Oct. 2, 1860
Aged 1 Y’r
5 mo. 17 d’s.

Look carefully at the bottom of the marker. Before the marker sunk into its foundation, an epitaph was visible! I see Sweet little bud for—do you? I am making a Google-supported guess to finish the verse:

Sweet little bud, for
earth too fair, has gone
to heaven to blossom there.

Clara Leasure, Oller Cemetery, Delaware County, Ohio

Monday, June 14, 2010

Youngest and last


On my first visit to Cheshire Cemetery in Delaware County, Ohio, I photographed the marker for David Jones (b. 1836, d. 1864) a Union soldier who died at Camp Chase in the summer of 1864. It is a striking monument, a tasseled stone podium holding an open book. I took several photos from several angles, focusing first on the book and the tassels.

Then I paused to read the inscription, and I forgot about books and tassels and gravestone symbols.

DAVID JONES
Co. H. 145th. Reg. O.N.G.
DIED AT CAMP CHASE O.
AUG. 29, A.D. 1864
AGED
28 YRS. 8 MO. 15 DS.

A loyal Soldier
to his country and his God
He was the youngest and
last of three Sons
of Z. & S. JONES who died
in the service of their Country

Solomon Jones (b. 1826), Andrew Jones (b. 1831), and David Jones, brothers and Union soldiers, died in the same year, 1864. According to cemetery records, all three brothers were buried along with their parents and other family members in old Cheshire Cemetery. Graves from that cemetery were moved to new Cheshire Cemetery in 1973 to make way for Alum Creek Reservoir.

There is evidence of a marker for Andrew in old Cheshire Cemetery, but I cannot find it in new Cheshire Cemetery. The markers for Solomon and David are there, near the marker for their parents, Zelotes Jones (b. 1791, d. 1874) and Sarah Jones (d. 1866).

If you visit Cheshire Cemetery, keep an eye out for Andrew’s marker. He is not named in the cemetery directory, but surely he is resting near his brothers.



Solomon, Zelotes and Sarah, David Jones

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Obstacles of beauty


Broken and barely legible grave markers are expected at older cemeteries, right? There is another, relatively common obstacle to reading and photographing grave markers: Garden plants gone wild.

A few weekends ago, I discovered my great grandmother’s marker engulfed by a white peony. Today, on another Find A Grave expedition, I found what I suspect is the marker of James Pendleton (b. 1807, d. 1879) hiding in a large bed of orange daylilies at Sandy Corners Cemetery in Dublin, Ohio.

Reading from the lily-less image at Find A Grave,

JAMES PENDLETON
BORN IN MAINE
June 23, 1807
DIED June 26, 1879
Aged 72 Yrs. 3 ds.

Tip: Visit Sandy Corners in early spring or late fall, when the daylily foliage is a bit less bountiful.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

From gravestones to folk songs


In 1973 the Army Corps of Engineers moved several cemeteries to make way for Alum Creek Reservoir outside of Columbus, Ohio. Old Cheshire Cemetery, Blockhouse Cemetery, and Townhouse Cemetery were moved to the new Cheshire Cemetery, my destination for this weekend’s Find A Grave photo request.

I quickly found the markers for Leon Nutt (b. 1900, d. 1929) and for his parents, Edward Nutt (b. 1859, d. 1928) and Susan Nutt (b. 1869, d. 1946)—not because of any great skill on my part, but because there is a detailed map with names of the grave sites at the entrance to the cemetery.

And what a beautiful cemetery!

At the very back, in the Blockhouse Cemetery section, the tall monument for Minerva Janes (d. 1848) with its obvious marks of repair caught my eye:

MINERVA, WIFE,
of,
HORACE
JANES, DIED, JAN.
30, 1848,
AGED, 37, YEARS.

At the bottom, I could make out only two lines of the epitaph:

Farewell ye friends whose tender care
Has long engaged my love

Then something something embrace I now exchange. What the heck were the last lines?

Now bear with me if you are familiar with this verse; I was not. So I googled it and discovered that what may have begun as a hymn in the 1800s is now considered a traditional folk song, Long Time Traveller, recently recorded by the Wailin’ Jennys.

Farewell ye friends whose tender care
Has long engaged my love
Your fond embrace I now exchange
For better friends above

Of course, my next stop was YouTube, and there were the Wailin’ Jennys, singing Minerva’s epitaph for all of us to hear.

Listen for Minerva’s epitaph beginning about 55 seconds into the video: Wailin’ Jennys sing Long Time Traveller.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Unfinished business at Oller


Instead of driving straight home after my visit to Cheshire Cemetery (more on that in a later post), I decided to swing over to Oller Cemetery again. I’ve been kicking myself all week for not photographing the probable grave marker for Effa Hamilton (b. 1805, d. 1852), the wife of Isaac Butt (d. 1876).

Yes, most of it was as difficult to read as I remembered—except the first name. EFFA is clear as can be. Don’t know why I thought I couldn’t read it when I wrote my earlier post. See? Should have taken the photo the first time.

Today, unlike my last visit, the sky was overcast and thunderstorms were on the way, and so I didn’t stay long. I’m sure I’ll return soon to Oller Cemetery, but for now, I’m feeling satisfied that I have finished my business with Effa.


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