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Gravehunting

7/31/2012

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PictureSt. Francis Cemetery, Phoenix, Arizona
Most people don't generally view cemeteries as pleasant places; some even consider them creepy or unlucky places.  For a genealogist, cemeteries and the gravestones within them are invaluable sources of information about people and communities of the past.  The information inscribed on gravestones - names, dates of birth and death, relation words such as "wife, "mother," or "son" - can serve as an important starting point in discovering when and where our ancestors lived.  Gravestones can also help validate information about ancestors that may have been located in other sources or passed down verbally through the generations.

There is a free website called
FindAGrave.com that is essentially a catalog of interments from cemeteries all over the world.  It is completely run by volunteers who set up memorial pages for friends, relatives, or even complete strangers who have passed on.  Once a memorial is posted, anyone can "request a photo" of any particular grave.  Volunteers receive photo requests via email from cemeteries located near their homes, and then go out to the cemeteries, search for the grave(s), take photos of them, and post it on website.  I found a photo of my great-grandfather's grave on the site, which was helpful to me, because he is buried in Arizona (where none of my family lives).  It was taken by a complete stranger who assists in cataloguing cemeteries for the website, and she even managed to track down and post his death certificate as well.

I became a volunteer grave photographer a couple of months ago.  I like to take photos, and it gives me something different to do with the kids outdoors.  Sometimes, I actually think they enjoy walking around the big old gravestones and large trees that are often in the older cemeteries we visit.  One day, I tracked down an older grave for a woman living in Kentucky.  She sent me a very kind 'thank you' email that was so, so appreciative, it just made my day.  She told me the story of how, in the post-Civil War era, her great-great-grandfather enlisted the help of his brother-in-law in discovering the fates of his southern family members.  She was trying to find where this brother-in-law ended up and my photograph of his gravestone confirmed the location of his final resting place and seemed to give her some sort of peace.  I felt like I had really made a difference in this woman's life. 

Most of the photo requests I search for, I cannot find.  This is especially true of people buried pre-1900.  Weathering renders many stones unreadable and, oftentimes, broken stones are not replaced and graves simply become unmarked.  Sometimes, it saddens me when I have to tell a person that I could not find the graves of their ancestors.  Nobody wants to hear that a family member, even one from generations ago, has been forgotten or neglected, even in death.  But still, most people thank me for going to the cemetery and looking, even if it was unsuccessful.

Just the other day, I received three emails saying that three of MY grave photo requests had been fulfilled.  A volunteer in western Ohio visited three separate cemeteries in Mercer County and photographed graves of Tony's ancestors.
 

Picture
St. Johns Catholic Church, Maria Stein, Ohio
Picture
St. Marys Cemetery, Philothea, Ohio
What I LOVE about these gravestones is that they are inscribed in German.  Through my research, I already knew both of these men were German immigrants, but these stones give me a sense of the culture of the region at the time of death.  Andreas Brunswick (first photo) immigrated to America in 1853.  He lived for 45 years in western Ohio, yet his gravestone is written in German.  So obviously, some communities in the region were still speaking German (or German/English hybrids), even as late 1898.  The second photo is the grave of Tony's great-great grandfather, Theodor Tumbusch, who arrived in America in 1861.  Unfortunately, he died quite young in 1870, so the only real what I call "life" documents relating back to Theodor are his immigrant ship roster and the 1870 U.S. Census.  The gravestone has helped me confirm the spelling of his name and his dates of birth and death.

©2012, copyright Emily Kowalski Schroeder

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    Emily Kowalski Schroeder

    Emily Kowalski Schroeder

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