[AT] funny..
Larry Goss
rlgoss at evansville.net
Sat Oct 28 11:00:03 PDT 2006
Nope. Farmer and I are serious about genealogical research and
cemetery restoration. For those of you who are doing this sort of
work, keep in mind that your local or state genealogy societies may
be able to give you some pointers on how to do it. I used to do
rubbings of old stones to bring out the weathered text. Now, I take
high resolution digital photos and enhance them in Photo Shop. The
results are a lot quicker and just as readable. Think in terms of
probing the cemetery grave sites to locate buried stones and/or to
check for whether a grave site is occupied. That is often an
intevening step prior to repairing the stones themselves. Genealogy
societies often take on the task of inventorying and repairing those
small burial lots that are out in the country and not under
any "perpetual care" agreements. New technology is bringing new
ideas about how to do this work. Now, besides taking digital photos
of each location, researchers are taking GPS readings as well so that
the exact locaton of a burial site can be catalogued. Once the
material is put into a computer (digital photo, transcript of
engraving, GPS coordinates) in PDF format then the whole thing can be
searched. FWIW, Adobe Acrobat Standard or Professional version will
allow you to automatically make every file on your computer, system,
network, etc, infinitely searchable -- whether it is open or not.
You obviously can't do a search on the visual images, but you can
search the identifying documentation that accompanies it. This is a
function that is built in to the Adobe program. So if you have
thousands of documents (diaries, letters, journals) once you have
them transcribed and stored as PDF files, you can locate any mention
of a person, event, date, location.... It is an unbelievably
powerful function.
On Thursday, we were "touring" Union Cemetery in Steubenville, Ohio.
The weather was ideal, the foliage was spectacular, the deer were
tame, and we found nearly two dozen gravesites of ancestors. This is
a marvelous cemetery. It is on a par with Pere la Chausse in
Southeaster Paris where anybody who ever was anybody in Europe is
buried -- Federic Chopin, Maria Callis, etc.
Larry
On Sat, 28 Oct 2006, John Hall wrote...
>Don't know if you guys are trying to be morbid with all this
cemetery talk
>or just trying to get in the season with Halloween next week, but
I'll go
>with the flow. How common was/is it in your neck of the woods to
have
>cemeteries on the farm? We used to have 2 farms leased that had
cemeteries
>on them. One had a large cemetery on it while there were two smaller
>cemeterys on the other.
>
> The large cemetry was smack in the middle of a 50 acre field (BIG
field for
>my area). It had a stone wall around it. If I remember correctly it
had
>filled up on the inside and they had started to bury folks on the
outside of
>the wall. Never got off the tractor to check any dates though. We
farmed
>practically within a few feet of the cemetery. It was overgrown with
trees
>although none of them were huge.
>
>The other farm actually had 3 gravesites come to think about it. One
was in
>a field, one was in the woods (tombstones dating to the 50's at this
site)
>and another gravesite was discovered when that farm began growing
its
>present crop (houses). Guy was clearing a lot in the woods and saw
something
>that looked like bone. Got off and checked and he noticed a row of
mounds.
>Long story short they had to hire someone to come in and move that
>gravesite. Speculation was that is may have been an old slave
cemetery.
>Couldn't find any markers except one piece of stone that looked like
it had
>a date chiseled in it but it wasn't very legible.
>
>John
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Francis Robinson" <robinson at svs.net>
>To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-
tractor.com>
>Sent: Saturday, October 28, 2006 12:16 AM
>Subject: RE: [AT] funny..
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>>
>> I found a new "need" for a butt buggy today. I'm tramping through
>> some pretty rough terrain in cemeteries in the upper Ohio valley,
>> and it sure would be nice to have my Jim Dandy (Economy) tractor
>> with me equipped with the dual transmissions and 12.25:1
>> differential to cruise around looking for tombstone inscriptions
>> (genealogy work). With the sunken graves (no vaults), a super-slow
>> tractor would be a tremendous help.
>>
>> Larry
>>
>>
>> Hi Larry:
>>
>> As it happens I also was out of state tramping cemeteries for the
last
>> couple of days. I didn't really have the time but the planets
lined up or
>> something and an opportunity presented its self. It would have
taken a
>> good-sized dozer to have gotten through one that I was in this
morning...
>> Really over-grown... ;-) Really sad how little respect people
have
>> for
>> those former living breathing souls that came before us and gave
us the
>> best
>> of what we have today. I found out yesterday that I need to return
to one
>> cemetery soon to replace 5 vandalized stones of family members.
They were
>> damaged since I was there last maybe 4 years ago. They are small
stones
>> but
>> it is going to be a bit expensive and it is a 5-hour drive one
way. On a
>> brighter note, three small cemeteries that I had not been in
before were
>> in
>> nice shape and very well kept.
>> We did once use a tractor in a cemetery. When I was a teen my
local 4-H
>> club took on the care of a small abandoned cemetery only a quarter
mile
>> from
>> the farm. It had so many deeply sunken graves that the club had a
big load
>> of fill dirt brought in and then I took the John Deere 40C crawler
in and
>> carefully leveled the whole thing. The club then reseeded it and
held the
>> mowing contract with the TWP for many years. That was in the 1950s
and the
>> club got $50 a year for maintaining it. The club is now gone but
the TWP
>> still pays someone to mow it. It still looks quite nice. I'll bet
the TWP
>> has to pay a lot more than $50 a year now. ;-)
>>
>> --
>> "farmer"
>>
>> The brave may not live forever but the easily frightened may never
live at
>> all.
>>
>> Francis Robinson
>> Central Indiana, USA
>> robinson at svs.net
>>
>>
>
>_______________________________________________
>AT mailing list
>Remembering Our Friend Cecil Monson 11-4-2005
>http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
More information about the AT
mailing list