Hi all.
This will be my first post on this site(or any other). Jim Sherlock's
post on the old graveyard he found struck a chord with me.
A week ago my wife and I were riding our bikes( her's a '02 650 V-star,
mine a '99 klr650). We were on Rt. 784 in n.e.KY, Lewis co. on the west side
of the road, Greenup co. on the east. We stopped at a suprisingly large(for
this area) cemetary on the Lewis side. There was a gravel drive that circled
the graveyard.
At the back of the cemetary, almost 200 yards from the road, was a
stand of "creek" stone markers. Most of these tombstones had the last name
of "Stone" scratched in them. The earliest date we could read on these
stones was "died 1823". As we walked toward the front of cemetary,there were
more "store bought" markers. We saw about 20 white marble markers, in good
shape, that seemed to have been put on Civil War vet. graves( Ky. and Oh.
military).One set of small stones in a row spoke of a family's pain: from
1914 to 1919, none of the children buried beneath lived more than three
months.
The closer we got to the road, the newer the graves; it looked like
about 200 graves in the cemetary, the newest "died 1999". There seemed to be
about 15 families represented. The Stone family progressed with us, in small
plots, as we wandered toward the east.
Then, in the last row, next to the road, a row of "creek" stones with
the name "Stone" chisled in them, the latest "died 1973".
The Stone family may not have been wealthy, but they did make their
stand.
CEB
power, flow
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