Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts
Showing posts with label halloween. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

The Barn with all the Windows

© Robin Edmundson, 'Orange Barn, Purple Windows', watercolor, 10 x 14 inches.  $375.


We found this barn just east of Beehunter Marsh in Greene County.   It's gray in real life, but it really does have all those funny windows.  Truth be told, it looks like a face to me now.  Like a barn being transformed into a Halloween jack o' lantern.   

I set it aside for a bit to see if it needed anything else, but it seems quite happy to be done.   All framed and ready to go now.  [Framed to 18 x 22 inches.  Matted in conservation quality mat.]

Friday, October 31, 2014

Pleasant Bethel Cemetery

Happy Halloween!

It's Spooky Day!   I hope you have something wonderfully fun planned for this evening.   We are going to snuggle up with a fun movie [The Ghost and Mr. Chicken] and a bowl full of chocolate. 

In the grand Halloween tradition of the blog, I bring you another wonderful rural cemetery.   This one is located between Freedom and Worthington, Indiana - off Highway 231 a few miles down Pleasant Bethel Rd. 

It's across the street from an old white church and it's nestled between corn fields and woods.   It's peaceful and beautiful there.


This year I noticed the wonderful types of carvings on the stones here.   I loved the stylized carving on the granite stones. 

The were several examples of art deco type carvings, like the corners of the John and Clara Nation stone.



The Mitten family area had many beautiful stones.  I loved Ella Mitten's stone.   Notice the anchor.   According to this site, anchors are often used in places where sailing is common.  That is not the case in southern Indiana, so it must mean something else.  Anchors are also symbols for steadfastness and that is most likely the meaning here.



This is the stone of Gracie Mitten.   Notice the gates on this stone and the stone above.   These are the Pearly Gates - the gates of heaven.  Open to allow the person in. 



I loved the simple carving on John C. Mitten's stone.   I saw the flower on several stones from the Mitten family.


This is the Colenbaugh stone.   I think those are stylized weeping willows - or perhaps columns? - just above the names.   I couldn't find any information on them.  

I love finding stones like these.  Notice Sarah's dates.

She was born Nov. 16, 1848, but she never died.   A perfect Halloween grave!   She'll be 166 years old in a couple of weeks.  



And speaking of the undead.   I found a couple more old stones with names of the undead.

Here is Josiah Trent's stone.   He was born February 7, 1828.  Apparently, he didn't die.   He's 186 this year.  

This is John Wesley Workman and Cristine C. Workman's stone.   Cristine was born on my birthday [July 16] in 1835.   No death date.  I hope this means that July 16th is a lucky date and I'll rocking the country life forever.  Or at least for 179 years or so.

Stacked log headstones are often markers of the graves of men who belonged to the Woodmen of the World fraternal organization.   Those graves usually have an axe carved on them, too.   I didn't find an axe on this marker, so I'm not sure if the stacked logs are symbolic or not. 

This site has a lot of information about the WoW grave markers.  See what you think.

And speaking of logs and wood, in almost every old cemetery out here, you'll find a marker like this one.   A carved tree trunk with broken limbs.    The symbolism is of a life cut short.   The carvings are marvelous and painstaking. 

This is Charles Dyer's stone.  He died in 1893. He was 23 years old when he died.   So sad.  

Someone clearly loved and missed him very much. 
There are ferns carved at the bottom of back of the tree and ivy climbing up and through the broken shield.   There's a lily at the bottom in the front. 

[But there's no axe.]  

There is a verse carved in a curve on the shield, but it's so worn that I can't read it at all.  Blow up the pic and do your best.


I hope you enjoyed this year's spooky cemetery tour.   If you want more, then here are previous years' tours.

2013 - Tulip Cemetery
2012 - Solsberry Cemetery
2011 - Philpot Cemetery

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Jack O Lanterns!



It's spook time!   The jack o lanterns are lighted and we're ready for Halloween!

K2 did the Cheshire Cat [of course] and Lily did a pumpkin pi.   

Tulip Cemetery

Happy Halloween!   This year I'm taking you to the Tulip Cemetery.   It's a classic old rural cemetery next to the old Tulip Church, which is just down the way from the new Tulip Church.    The stones are tilted and tipped and we noticed that the rows of graves are definitely not straight.   There's a lot of history here and we found some great stones.

Here is a link to the 2012 post about Solsberry Cemetery.
Here is a link to the 2011 post about Philpot Cemetery.

Tulip Cemetery is a cemetery that is mixed old and new and it's as full of interesting stories as the rest of our rural cemeteries.   Here are a couple of the newer and very interesting stones.  

This Helms stone lists the profession of the husband and wife.  I loved this!    [I forgot to get a pic of their names and dates for you.]


This stone for Allen Sarvis has his photo on it.  I liked the whole photo thing, but it creeped my kids out. 

I love his epitaph:  He cared. 

Lovely.






I was lucky enough to find several graves from old soldiers here.   This was the oldest stone that I saw in the cemetery.   George Sarver was born in 1787 and died in 1862.  He was 75 when he died.   He served in the War of 1812.    How cool is that?





Next to him was his wife's grave. 

Elizabeth Sarver was born in 1797 and died in 1879.    She was 82 when she died. 



This is Simpson Osborn's gravestone.   He served in the Mexican War, 2nd Indiana Infantry, Company E.  He was a private.

I found an amazing record of this regiment here.  The men in this regiment were all from around here.   It looks like Private Osborn did survive the Mexican War, but not much else is known about his service. 









Way back on the edge of the grounds I found this grave in the brush, surrounded by honeysuckle and poison ivy and grapevines.

This is a Civil War veteran's grave.



This man is Robert E. Daily.  He was a corporal in the 186th Ohio Infantry, Company G.   You can see him here on page 13 of this pdf

I want to know how he got to Ohio to enlist and then back to Indiana.   Did he survive the war and then move here from Ohio? 






This was the most interesting stone in and of itself that I found.  It's brick.   The only one like it that I've seen.   It's for a child.  The letters were incised with a sharp instrument. 

Did her father make it for her?


It says:

Virginia Jean
Born July 30, 1918
Died Jan 16, 1923
Age 4 yrs, 6 mo

These winter deaths - I wonder if it was the flu or another epidemic that took her. 




This is the monument for Margret Bunch.    Her epitaph reads:

Beneath this 
stone I've 
placed in trust
Not the 
immortal but 
the dust
of one on
earth to me
most dear
who learned in
youth her God
to fear.





Another cool epitaph was on Jacob Axe's headstone.   We could read everything but one word in the middle.    Tell us what you think it is.

An amiable father here lies at rest
As ever God with His wings blest
The friend of _______, the friend of truth
The friend of age, the guide of youth.




Martha Osburn's stone has all the Ns backward. 

Kinda makes me wonder what was going on there.




This stone was right at the foot of a tree.   

Which means, some squirrel planted something here at the base of the stone and the tree was allowed to grow up right next to the headstone for a lot of years.   Too bad; it's a very interesting stone.










 Emily A. McCullough
was born Jan 3 1884
died Oct 30, 1885

Did you notice the lines across the stone? Someone wanted to make sure those lines were written straight...ly.




Our very favorite stone of all is the most appropriate one for Halloween.

Almira Nidy was born January 1, 1846 and .....that's all.

She appears to be still alive.

Or perhaps just undead.

 




Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Solsberry Cemetery



This is the sign on the road that leads to the Philpot Cemetery just down the way from us.   I laugh every time I see it, and I've been saving this pic for today.  

Happy Halloween! 

To celebrate this day of the dead, we went to another local cemetery, Solsberry Cemetery, just off Highway 43, north of Solsberry, Indiana.     It's a wonderful old cemetery, still in use, with graves dating from the mid 1800s.   

Pretty, isn't it!

The vast majority of the old gravestones here have been carved out of limestone.  Many of them are signed by the carver, T H Sudbury, Bloomington.     This is the grave of Lizzie E. Thompson, wife of William E. Thompson.  She was 21 years, 5 months and 22 days old when she died on January 19, 1880.    It must have been cold when they dug her grave and buried her.   I wonder what she died of.

Click the pic and check the bottom right of the stone for Mr. Sudbury's signature. 



We found more interesting carving on the gravestone of John Cox.   He was born January 3, 1821 and he died April 17, 1891.   What changes he must have seen all around him during his life.   He lived through the Civil War.  


I love his epitaph, way down at the bottom:  Farewell my wife and children all, from you a father Christ doth call.



I also love this gravestone because of the carving in the center.   It's faint, but still visible.  





Here was another gravestone that I loved.   This is on the grave of 3 year old Nellie Torrence.  She was  born July 3, 1884 and she died August 2, 1887.   Her epitaph is:   Buried on earth to bloom in heaven.  

So sweet.    She is buried next to her sister Ruth, who died at 2 yrs old. 

The most interesting stones we found were a couple of stones shaped and carved by hand out of the local creek rock.   It's a miracle they've lasted all these years.   

Here is the stone for L M Newton.  No other information.    What did L M die of?   Who carved the stone?    Were they too poor for a limestone marker?     These graves are mixed in with the others, and not separated in another section as if they were in the pauper's part of the cemetery.




This is the gravestone of Hannah May.   Her name is misspelled on the stone:  Hannh May.    She was born Jan 25, 1817.  She died Sept 6, 1855.   

We love our local cemeteries.  They are so peaceful and they tell such interesting stories.   Check out my post from last year to see Philpot Cemetery

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...