Ernie,
Find original stones all the time...just found one( 4 marble fragments with
fist name and the first letter of the surname) this week in the farm fence.
A granite replacement stone is there so the fragments will be
documented,photographed and then buried behind the stone. The husband's
stone is also there in poor condition, but still able to go back up...so a
slotted base will go in and his stone will be put in beside the granite
stone.
If at all possible I try to put up the marble stone....they just have a lot
more character than a modern slant granite stone.
Mark
Original Message:
-----------------
From: Ernie & Connie Lasley elasley(a)spamcop.net
Date: Sun, 24 Oct 2004 18:47:34 -0500
To: INPCRP-L(a)rootsweb.com
Subject: Re: [INPCRP] Routh Cemetery -Left over pieces
If there are no more possibilities of finding additional stones, then I
would do like you suggested and set them in a base in the row near where
they were found. They can also be set temporarily as you suggested in
case a matching headstone is found later. I would NEVER bury a footstone
behind a headstone that it did not match. I agree on setting fragments in
a slotted base also. Nothing should be discarded or buried unless it is
identified. Even stones or larger rocks should not be discarded, they may
be "fieldstones" marking the grave of someone that could not afford a
marker. We had a large stone like that in Gibson County, a closer
inspection revealed the initials "K F" roughly carved on it. Turns out it
marked the grave of Keen Field, an immigrant pioneer who died in 1815. His
descendants had a stone made in the style of other headstones in the
cemetery and set it beside the original stone. See:
http://www.rootsquest.com/~jmurphy/gibson/gibcem/wr_field-morrison/keen_fiel
d.htm
Wondering, have you ever discovered fragments of a stone that was
replaced? I found fragments of a Hindostan Whetstone gravestone that
looked like it had been hit in the center with a sledge hammer and
shattered. After many hours of careful digging with a small trowel, a
spatula and brushes, I recovered enough of it to fit the fragments together
good enough to read the information, only to discover they were buried
directly over a grave that had a marble headstone with the same name and
dates. Apparently 75 - 100 years ago the stone was replaced for some
reason with the marble stone, and buried behind it. I put it back where
it was.
Ernie
At 05:42 PM 10/24/2004 -0400, you wrote:
I understand Ernie...I thought that there were no more possibilities
of
finding addditional headstones. So if that is the case then what headstone
would you bury the footstones behind if no matched are found? My idea would
be put up the footstones as some type of memorial, and if the headstone is
found later then dig out the footstone and base and move it to the
appropriate headstone.
The headstone fragments that are not able to be set vertically will be
tough decisions. I have set headstone fragments in slotted bases where only
25% of the stone remains. I feel it still is better than burying the stone.
I never consider the plight of the lawn mower man..if we are restoring
pioneer cemeteries to their original state then footstones should be placed
just like they were originally.(just my opinion)
Mark Davis
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