I've heard it LOOKS like the hair and fingernails grow because the skin,
etc. is shrinking (i.e., deteriorating).
MaryAlice
----- Original Message -----
From: <ejwray(a)ccrtc.com>
To: <INPCRP-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Saturday, June 29, 2002 9:43 AM
Subject: Re: [INPCRP] Hair growing after death?
Hello Mark:
I have heard that the hair grows and so do the fingernails, etc.
Mark...when you do the slab-mix...do you put it in the channel first then
the stone or put the stone in first and try to get that ..d..stuff down
that
little crack?
Joan Wray
Tipton county
by the way...you work much faster than we do...must be an age thing.
J
----- Original Message -----
From: "mark davis" <md9105(a)skyenet.net>
To: <INPCRP-L(a)rootsweb.com>
Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2002 7:20 PM
Subject: [INPCRP] Hair growing after death?
> First, this off topic by a mile.
>
> But I was at an African-American cemetery in Grant county today. One of
the gentleman there was telling about hand digging graves. He said they
accidentally dug into a grave while digging another grave many years ago
and
there was long gray hair coming out of side of the wood casket.
>
> Has anyone heard of this? He said that hair has been known to keep
growing after death.
>
> OK, my next post will be on topic.
>
> PS- 45 stones restored at Eagletown cemetery in Hamilton county. The
work
continues.
>
>
> Mark Davis
> 4 Lakeview Ct.
> Hartford City,Indiana 47348
> md9105(a)skyenet.net
>
>
> With malice toward none, with charity for all,with
> firmness in the right as God gives us to see the
> right,let us strive on to finish the work we are in...
>
> A. Lincoln March 4,1865
>
>
>
> ==== INPCRP Mailing List ====
> THIS IS A CEMETERY -----
> "Lives are commemorated - deaths are recorded - families
> are reunited - memories are made tangible - and love is
> undisguised. This is a cemetery.
> "Communities accord respect, families bestow reverence,
> historians seek information and our heritage is thereby enriched.
> "Testimonies of devotion, pride and remembrance are carved
> in stone to pay warm tribute to accomplishments and to the life -
> not the death - of a loved one. The cemetery is homeland for family
> memorials that are a sustaining source of comfort to the living.
> "A cemetery is a history of people - a perpetual record of
> yesterday and sanctuary of peace and quiet today. A cemetery
> exists because every life is worth loving and remembering - always."
> --Author unknown -- Seen at a monument dealer in West Union,
IA
>
>
==== INPCRP Mailing List ====
If we cannot respect the dead, how can we respect the living?