Showing posts with label I.O.O.F. cemetery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label I.O.O.F. cemetery. Show all posts

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Update: George Thomas Ray

The original post for George Thomas Ray was made in Feb 2011. I have had very little success in finding any information about him.  I was pointed to a website that had the following information.  I am not sure if it is the same George Thomas Ray but I think it might be.

The following excerpt is from http://www.historical-footprints-2010.com/bunch_3.html by Barbara Inman Beall.


Threats at Bryant Home

Mr. [John A. (Alfred) ] Bryant's daughter, Lucy, in a Press interview, Sept. 7, 1922, then Mrs. Lucy Blakely, told of her father's escape but only mentioned two men coming to the house.

"One day in January," she said, "there rode up to the home of my father, John A. Bryant, two men from down on Shoal creek. One was Joe Thompson and the other was Tom Rae. Rae was wearing a Union solder's overcoat and carried a rifle while Thompson was dressed in ordinary civilian garb and was armed with a double-barrelled shotgun.

My father had been sick in bed and was sitting up in a chair that day for the first time. Our visitors wanted him to go outdoors with them but he refused, stating that he was not able. They talked for quite a while, urging on my father the advantages of declaring himself for the south and tried on various pretexts to get him to come outside. Finally Thompson rose in a rage.

"Well, if you will not go outside I will kill you anyway right here," he said with an oath, cocking his shotgun and aiming it at my father's breast.

"We children set up a scream and my mother sprang in front of my father. I remember yet exactly how the caps on Thompson's gun looked as he stood there with the weapon leveled. It was Rae who saved us.

"Come out of here, Joe," he said, "or you will scare these children to death." And Thompson sullenly lowered his gun and complied.

Murder of Brice Martin

"From our house they went a quarter of a mile south to the home of Brice Martin, mother's brother, and called him out to the fence. They talked awhile and Mrs. Martin, coming to the door, saw her husband turn away and start back to the house. As he did so, one of the men fired with the double-barrelled shotgun, the charge of buckshot striking my uncle in the back and killing him instantly. My aunt always said that the man in the blue overcoat fired the shot but my mother and father had known Tom Rae all their lives and could never believe that he would so murder Brice Martin with whom he was well acquainted.

"My aunt ran down to our house to tell what had happened…Eliza Parnell spread the word of the murder and my mother went up and watched by the body which lay until 9 o'clock in the yard where it had fallen. We had many good neighbors, some of them northern sympathy, most of them southern but not a man on either side dared to go after the body until 9 o'clock for fear of being murdered. Then two southern sympathizers, George Hammer and John Rafedy, and a Union man, James Landers, slipped up to the Martin's home under cover of darkness, picked up the body and brought it to our house where it was left that night.

Southern Home Guard Aids

"There was something of a panic among the people of the neighborhood following the killing, especially those known to favor the cause of the north. My father did not dare stay home that night and he and Marsh Parnell went over to the home of Mrs. Sally Keith over close to the Carthage road, and laid there concealed in the attic all night. The Parnells were almost all southern people, but Marsh was known as a Union man and his life was in as much danger as anyone's despite his southern kindred.

"Everyone in the neighborhood was at first afraid to have anything to do with the Martin funeral, but finally James Bunch, captain of a southern home guard company, said he would have the grave dug and would furnish protection to those coming to the burial. He and his men dug the grave in the cemetery of the old Freedom Baptist church near Moss Springs and a man in Fidelity made a coffin. My uncle was buried the next day, there being a considerable number of women present, a few men, including my father and Marsh Parnell, and a number of Captain Bunch's home guard company.

"Immediately after the funeral the Union men took to the timber and prepared to leave the country that night. There were in the party besides my father and Marsh Parnell, Dr. D. F. Moss, Riley Moss, William Spencer and several others, perhaps as many as a dozen all told. They made their way safely to Kansas and we stayed alone until two months later when they came back with a detachment of Union soldiers and took us to Fort Scott." [29]

John A. Bryant (Alfred Bryant) was the brother of Adeline Elizabeth Bryant Spence, wife of Lazarus Spence. The John Bryants fled to Fort Scott, Kansas and never returned to Jasper Co., Missouri. They spent the rest of their lives in Kansas. John Bryant's wife was Nancy Martin, who was the sister of Brice Martin, the man who was murdered. The Prigmores and Martins had intermarried. And, of course, Nimrod Porter Bunch's wife was a Prigmore.

The newspaper account did not identify the man from Fidelity who made the coffin, but I have an idea it was Nimrod Bunch. Brother Jim and his men dig the grave in Moss Springs, and had a man in Fidelity make the coffin. Given the Bunch ancestry of carpenters and cabinet makers, Nimrod would have been an excellent candidate for the job. That may have been the reason why the Nimrod Bunch family left the area during the remainder of the war. They went to Johnson Co., Missouri (near Warrensburg), where their child, Leander, was born and where a number of Prigmores were living. They did not return to Jasper County until after the war had ended.

Brice Martin was only 17 years of age when he was killed.

One discovery generally leads to another question. In this case, the question had a double segment: who were Tom Rae and Joe Thompson and what happened to them?


George Thomas Ray was born in Kentucky in 1833 to John Ray (1805-1860) and Sarah A. Spears (1805-1892). The Rays lived in Neosho, Newton Co., Missouri. Tom's wife's name was Emeline (b. 1833). Their children were:

Jennette Ray 1852 -
Laurette Ray 1855 -
Frances Ray 1857 -
Etta Ray 1862 -
George T Ray 1863 - [30]

On March 14, 1862, a little over two months after the Brice Martin murder and according to the inscription on his tombstone, Tom Ray was murdered on the Neosho courthouse square. He was 29 years of age when he was killed. [Perhaps he was going to turn in someone for the murder of Brice Martin??!!]

Friday, July 22, 2011

The Great Pyramid In Missouri

Located at the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Mount Vernon, MO.
On the front side is this.
Enoch's Circle (Diagramed)
Genesis 5:23 (And all the days of Enoch were three hundred sixty and five years)
Luke 21:24-32(24And they shall fall by the edge of the sword, and shall be led away captive into all nations: and Jerusalem shall be trodden down of the Gentiles, until the times of the Gentiles be fulfilled.

25And there shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations, with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring;
26Men's hearts failing them for fear, and for looking after those things which are coming on the earth: for the powers of heaven shall be shaken.
27And then shall they see the Son of man coming in a cloud with power and great glory.
28And when these things begin to come to pass, then look up, and lift up your heads; for your redemption draweth nigh.
29And he spake to them a parable; Behold the fig tree, and all the trees;
30When they now shoot forth, ye see and know of your own selves that summer is now nigh at hand.
31So likewise ye, when ye see these things come to pass, know ye that the kingdom of God is nigh at hand.
32Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass away, till all be fulfilled.)

Enoch Circle
There is massive amounts of information on Enoch's Circle. All you have to do is Google it.   
Picture of the out side of the Great Pyramid.
Mathew 21:42 (Jesus saith unto them, Did ye never read in the scriptures, The stone which the builders rejected, the same is become the head of the corner: this is the Lord's doing, and it is marvellous in our eyes?)
Ephesians 2:20:21(having been built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief cornerstone, 21 in whom the whole building, being fitted together, grows into a holy temple in the Lord)
Zechariah 4:7(Who art thou, O great mountain? before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a plain: and he shall bring forth the headstone thereof with shoutings, crying, Grace, grace unto it.)
Psalms 118:22-23(22 The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone; 23 the LORD has done this, and it is marvelous in our eyes.)
First Peter 2:6(6 For in Scripture it says: “See, I lay a stone in Zion, a chosen and precious cornerstone, and the one who trusts in him will never be put to shame.”)
This is a diagram of the inside of the Great Pyramid. 
286.1 Pyramid Inch
PI 3.14159
Job 38:31(Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion)
Amos 5:8(Seek him that maketh the seven stars and Orion, and turneth the shadow of death into the morning, and maketh the day dark with night: that calleth for the waters of the sea, and poureth them out upon the face of the earth: The LORD is his name:) 
You can read the explaination of this at http://www.vectorpub.com/CH10.htm.
This is the location of the Great Pyramid of Giza.

The closest markers were these two. So I am assuming they belong with the pyramid.
Joseph D
1919 - 2006

Patricia Addline
1913 - 1997

Monday, June 13, 2011

Update: Annie Apple Van Marm

Original post on May 20, 2010.

First Update on April 30, 2011.

I recently got to exchange a few emails with a friend of Annie Apple Van Marm's and she was kind enough to send me a few photos of her.  She also told me that Annie made all the Tye-Dyed items in the photos. Thank you so much for sending me the photos.  It is such a wonderful thing to put a beautiful face with such a unique memorial.

Annie Apple Van Marm
1971 - 1991

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Update: Annie Apple Van Marm

Back in May of 2010 I posted a blog titled "Complete with real skulls" of this very interesting grave located in the I.O.O.F. cemetery in Eureka Springs, AR.
I posted her name as Annie Applemar in the previous post.  I now believe her name is actually Annie Apple Van Marm, thanks to a much better photo posted on Arkansas Gravestones Project website and a little research I have done.

Here is the photo that Vickie Kane posted on the Arkansas Gravestones Project website.
You can clearly read "Annie Apple Marm" but if you look real close you can see the word "Van" is wedged in as if it was originally forgotten and added later.

So I started researching both names and this is the information I have come up with.

Note:
I may be reading this wrong but to me the following sounds to me as if Annie's mother, Luana, is writing to this website and also channeling Annie as well.  I could be completely wrong but that is the way I am reading it. You can also go to the cited link below and see where Luana said :
"Annie Apple is dead....and working INTENSLY with all of Us here, form beyond the vail"

Letters From Annie Apple's Mom (and Annie Apple) (http://www.educate-yourself.org/lte/letterannieapplesmom14sep05.shtml , April 29, 20011)
From: luana
To: Educate-Yourself
Sent: Wednesday, September 14, 2005 10:11 PM
Subject: Re: POWERFUL , Mother, Priestesses

Yes, Miss Annie Apple Van Marm, "The Rainbow Dancer"

She was the vegan, tye dye queen, and stage dancer for the Greatful Dead, She danced with beautiful rainbow scarfs that She dyed Herself.

Hit on a bridge by a Wal Mart truck, the cameras immidiately started rolling right after the accident, so I saw the whole thing from many angles....a hundred times....including the part where She looked into the camera and whispered "mamma" ....and than, with the speed of insanity, She gasped and died.

500 people showed up for Her funeral and She is still to this day a local, and even an international legend......

Annie was Jerry Garcia's and Bobby Wier's favorite tye dye artist and stage dancer, singer and 12 string guitar player.....they came to Her funeral and payed for everything....so did Willy Nelson and members of his family

The article of her death and life was on the frount page of the Arkansas newspaper and they refered to Her as a "national Treasure"....Her beauty and power and art and dancing and music were also mentioned.

Her Father is Bernard Petar Van Marm who is a multimedia artist in Chicago

She never went to any school....She was a raw food vegan all of Her life. She studyed music and art since She was 5 years old

To say that She was physicaly beautiful, that would be an understatement...Long Golden Hair and big fat lips and boobs, and dazzeling blue eyes.

That is how She was in Life

This is how She is now

Hi Ken,
This is Annie, I read a lot of Your posts with My Mom, and of course She reads aloud all of the very amazing letters and s.a. s that are written in from others. I am here just outside of a warp from my Mom, I am here with a group of very cool and informed dead people and we work like You in-body do, we help pull everything together. I stay here with my mom and sister, Delilah, a lot, and I do many things for them because I am now able to go in and out of them, so I sometimes lend them my perspectives, and to gather we have been doing a lot of magic with our work to increase the Heart vibration of Earth Humans both dead and living.

Just like where You are there in body, there are also MANY dangers here, and MUCH work to be done....the lower levels here are choked with fumes and little pieces of Our Mother's Heart that just drift aimlessly without much consciousness ...My Mother and I have opted to go to these places and magnetically pull these tortured and confused magnetic particles into Our Loving Hearts, bring them to "the Light" and figure out what they need to live and be happy and sweet....again.

I very much appreciate it that You are curious about Me, very flattered and I Love the Miracle of being able to talk to You.

Annie Apple Van Marm
Wow !

Luana here, Why did You say that You were "Facinated"....was that a typo? cause if it wasn't....OMG !!!

I'm still on storm control duty so I gotta get back to that now.

and

Dont worry if I say "I Love You" ....in My clan here at My cottage we use "I Love You's" like comas and periods....just not the fake kind of "I Love Yous" rather We say I Love You in FULL counciousness.....so stress not ....We REALLY DO, "Love You"

so sue Us

Luana, Delilah and Annie Apple
************************************************************
I also found a website that had a photo of Annie's grave and the referred to it as a  Local Witch's Grave.  (You can click the link and read what they have written about it.)
**************************************************

I am still looking for more information so if any of you happen to come across any please feel free to send it my way.

Update

Here is another photo I took at a different visit http://escapetothesilentcities.blogspot.com/2010/08/just-photo-i-like_15.html

Photos of Annie can bee seen here http://escapetothesilentcities.blogspot.com/2011/06/update-annie-apple-van-marm.html

Friday, April 15, 2011

Update: Joplin - Neosho Train Crash

I have blogged on this inccident twice before. The orginal post, in May 2010, was fairly basic. But the second post, in February 2011, I was able to track down most of the death certificates of the victims.  After writting the second post I made a trip back to the Neosho I.O.O.F. Cemetery to see if I could locate the headstones of the ones who are buried there.  Sadly the snow had not melted off enought to do much searching.  However, I was able to find the Harmon Family Plot that sits directly behind the Memorial Monument. I do plan to go back soon and see if I can find any others.

This is the Harmon Family Plot marker

Josie
Feb 24, 1880
Aug 5, 1914

Loyd
Feb 5, 1906
Aug 5, 1914

Ray
Aug 3, 1901
Aug 5, 1914

Stella
Dec 10, 1909
Aug 5, 1914

Friday, March 18, 2011

Charles Christian Hammer - An American Classical Guitarist

Located at the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Eureka Springs, AR.
~Sir~
Charles Christian Hammer
May 17, 1952 - Feb 18, 2004
Beloved Master Musician

No matter where The saints abide, They make
their circuit fair. Behold! How great a
firmament accompanies a star

Note: the epitaph at the bottom is from "No matter where the Saints abide," by Emily Dickinson
*****
'Sir Charles' gave his music and love


Tuesday, February 24, 2004
Carroll County News

Arrangements for memorial services for Charles Christian Hammer, 51, longtime Eureka Springs resident, are pending.

Hammer passed away in a Rogers hospital Wednesday evening. He had been hospitalized for treatment of a lung tumor.

Friday evening, he was honored as the Musician of the Year by members of the Greater Eureka Springs Chamber of Commerce during the annual "Eureka's Best" dinner.

John Two Hawks called Hammer "my musical comrade" as he spoke briefly about "his magic hands and feet."

"He could turn a guitar into a river or a beating heart," Two Hawks said. "He knew the transforming power of his music. He was a master living in our midst. And at the end of the day, he was a lot of fun."

Many of his friends saw him as "a true Renaissance Man. Born with music in his soul, he brought light and joy to his family and friends as well as to the many who knew him from the beautiful music he created and shared with the world."

Hammer was born in May 17, 1952, in Chicago.

After graduation from high school in Virginia, Charles' love of the guitar led him to Puebla, Mexico, into private tutelage under Maestro Juan Gaspar for the next three years.

He was planning a spring tour in Mexico including performances in San Miguel de Allende, Puebla and Guanajuato.

He moved to Eureka Springs in the 1970s and became part of the musical establishment in the community, playing for weddings, special events, dinners and in Basin Park for the sheer joy of playing.

He earned a bachelor of arts and a master's degree in music at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville.

In the late 1990s, he taught guitar and music history at the university.

In 1998, he was awarded a music composition fellowship by the Arkansas Arts Council.

A respected classical guitar virtuoso, he often played on National Public Radio (NPR), and participated in educational programs sponsored by NPR in area schools introducing children to music.

He has recorded 11 albums. His latest is a collection of Beatles love songs, "It's Only Love."

Survivors include his longtime partner, Poco Carter, and his mother, Floss Schloss of Rogers.

*****************************


The following info is from Wikipedia.

Charles Christian "Sir Charles" Hammer, (1952 - 18 February 2004), was an American classical guitarist.

Charles Christian Hammer was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1952. Hammer took up the guitar in his youth after hearing The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show. He purchased his first guitar with earnings from a newspaper route. Hammer was influenced heavily by The Beatles throughout his career.

During the 1970s Hammer moved to Mexico where he studied Spanish guitar. Hammer stated that his nickname, "Sir Charles", was given to him about this time by a "fairy princess" with golden hair, but it is more probable that the nickname arose from comments about the styling of his blond hair or the baroque puffy-sleeved shirts he wore on stage.

In the 1980s Hammer moved back to the United States, establishing himself as a local act in the small artist's retreat of Eureka Springs, Arkansas, where he performed at weddings and parties.

During this time and into the 1990s Hammer experimented in the studio. He generated 11 albums that combined electric and classical guitar but fell short of his long established goal of producing 30 albums during his lifetime.

In the late 1990s, Hammer taught guitar and music history at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree and a master's degree in music. In 1998 he was awarded a music composition fellowship by the Arkansas Arts Council. Hammer's final album was a classical guitar rendering of several of his favorite Beatles songs.

Just prior to his death Hammer began to experience some commercial success in the foreign market and was scheduled to tour three cities in Mexico. Hammer was a much-loved figure in Eureka Springs, especially by the local children for whom he put on school concerts.

In 2003 he was diagnosed with lung cancer. Charles Christian Hammer died on 18 February 2004 at St. Mary's Hospital in Rogers, Arkansas. Hammer was survived by his long-time partner, Poco Carter, and their dog Prema.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Laddie Joe Harp

Located at the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Eureka Springs, AR.
Laddie Joe Harp
Dec 20, 1926
Aug 29, 2007
Laddie "Joe Harp"
NASCAR 1950 - 1954 Car #20 & 6
Honolulu, Hawaii

Member of
NASCAR Living Legends Museum
Daytona Beach, Florida

Laddie Joe Harp
US Navy
US Coast Guard
SSGT US Army Air Forces
World War II Korea
Dec 20, 1926 - Aug 29, 2007

*****************************************
Eureka Springs loses patriot son
Wednesday, September 5, 2007


Zoe and Albert Harp, long-time Eureka Springs Folk Festival fixtures and owners of historic Harp's Old Time Grocery, are seen in this 1970s photo. The Harp family operated their store from 1885 until Albert's death in 1985. Their son, the late Laddie Joe Harp, often helped at the store.
 By Donice Woodside

EUREKA SPRINGS -- Laddie Joe Harp, a native of Eureka Springs, died at his Holiday Island home on Wednesday evening, Aug. 29 at the age of 80.

He was born on Dec. 20, 1926, the only child of Albert and Zoe Harp, owners of Harp's Old Time Grocery, Eureka Springs' oldest store. "He came from good people, with good roots," said Bank of Eureka Springs president John Cross.

Harp was the grandson of Claude Pike, a former Eureka Springs police chief and foreman of the first organized fire company in Eureka Springs. Harp began carrying on his family's tradition of service at the young age of 17. He served in the Navy, Army Special Forces, Air Force and Coast Guard and was a veteran of WWII and the Korean War. He was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Elks Lodge, American Veterans and the American Legion.

Harp also helped organize the Greater Ozarks Patriots Association, an organization which included not only veterans, but also Elks, Legionaires, Lions and members of other groups committed to public service. Later, he served as its president.

Harp was most proud, however, of his role as state bugler for Missouri's American Legion, playing Taps at veterans' funerals across the state, sometimes attending as many as five funerals in one day.

Charge!

Harp seldom missed the Eureka Springs Folk Festival parade, riding at the lead, he was recognized by many when he bugled "Charge!"

"During the antique car parade, when you heard that distant bugle sounding 'Charge!,' you knew Laddie Joe would soon drive by in his 1975 white Corvette," said Shirley Harp, his wife of 19 years. Sometimes, people across town could hear him playing bugle on his East Mountain porch.

After his military service, Harp began playing the bugle as a professional musician in Springfield and Joplin, Mo. He continued to entertain at veterans' conventions throughout his life.

Always the lover of a thrill, Harp raced for NASCAR in Honolulu, Hawaii during the early 50s. He is included in NASCAR's Living Legends Museum in Daytona Beach, Fla. He raced motorcycles in Springfield until he was 50 years old.

Beloved Son

"The whole family doted on Laddie Joe," recalled Cross, whose cousins Rena Brown and Helen Harper told him when Harp was a very little boy, he discovered if he left his bedroom door open and prayed real loud for something, someone in the house would hear and get it for him.

As older boys, Cross and Harp rode horses on the Harp farm. "Laddie Joe and I both loved horses," he said. "We loved to ride them, and we loved to train them."

As a young man, Harp did odd jobs for Cross' grandfather, U.S. Congressman Claude A. Fuller.

Shirley often thought recording her husband's stories would have been a good idea. "You should write some of this down," she told him.

Harp agreed, although he never committed his memories to paper. "I know things nobody in this town knows," he said.

Harp is survived by one son, Mark Harp, and wife Cindy; one grandson, Joey Harp; and one great grandson, Jason Harp, all of Springfield, Mo. He was preceded in death by his parents, grandparents and his maternal aunt.

Graveside services were held Saturday at the Eureka Springs Cemetery. When asked whether she wanted to put Harp's watch back on his wrist, Shirley opted not to. "It has an alarm. When it goes off, it makes the sound of a rooster crowing," she said, laughing through her grief. She thought it would be tacky if the rooster crowed during the memorial service.

***********************************

Laddie Joe Harp
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
Carroll County News

LADDIE JOE HARP, a resident of Holiday Island, was born Dec. 20, 1926, in Eureka Springs, a son of Albert and Zoe (Wright) Harp. He died Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2007, at the age of 80.

Mr. Harp was a musician. He was also a member of the Elks Lodge, the American Legion, and the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He attended the First Christian Church of Eureka Springs.

On Feb. 21, 1988, he was united in marriage with Shirley Francis, who survives him of the home. He is also survived by one son, Mark Harp, and wife Cindy; one grandson, Joey Harp; and one great grandson, Jason Harp, all of Springfield, Mo.

He was preceded in death by his parents, his Aunt Edna, and his grandparents.

Graveside services were held Saturday, Sept. 1, 2007, at the Eureka Springs Cemetery. Interment followed in the Eureka Springs Cemetery under the direction of Nelson Funeral Service. Online condolences may be sent to the family at nelsonfuneral.com.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Murdered On The Court House Square

I and a few others have searched and searched for information on this gentleman and have all come up empty handed.  If you have any information on this gentleman we would all love to hear it.  Please feel free to either post a comment or email me privately at nailgal123@gmail.com.

Located at the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Neosho, MO.
To The Meomory Of
Grandfather
George Thomas Ray
Born In Kentucky 1833
Murdered On
Court House Square
Neosho MO March 14, 1862
Erected by
Claude L. & Hazel M. Ray

Update:

Friday, February 11, 2011

Update: Joplin - Neosho Train Crash

Back in May of 2010 I posted a blog on the Joplin - Neosho Train Crash featuring the memorial I found that listed only 15 of the 43 people that perished in the accident.  I set out to see if I could find all the names of the victims and any additional information.  I am happy to say I was able to find 31 of the 43 victims and some additional info.





Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Killed In Battle

Located at the I.O.O.F Cemetery in Monett, MO.
Russell L. Hobbs
Born Feb 23, 1895
Killed In Battle
Oct 5, 1918 
1st Div. 5th  F  A
Bat. A  A.E.F.
1917 - 1918
Sommerville Sector
Ansonville Sector
Montdidier Sector
Cantigny
Soissons
2nd Battle Of The Marne
St. Mihiel
Argonne & Meuse

He is listed under Privates on http://genealogytrails.com/mo/military_ww1_soldiersofgreatwar.htm

Thursday, October 14, 2010

First Woman Doctor in Arkansas

Dr. Pearl Tatman resting in the IOOF Cemetery in Eureka Springs, AR.
Dr. Albert E
Tatman
1870-1925

Dr Pearl
Tatman
1867-1944

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Stone fits the name or the name fits the stone.

Located at the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Neosho, MO.
I like the way the bottom of the stored vase makes the top of the bell.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Not sure why...

But interesting just the same.  I spotted this gleaming black cube from the top of the hill.  Of course I had to go check it out.


Beneath the cube Reads:
James Lex Cook
Nov 10, 1958 - Dec 29, 1983
Life is a grain of sand in the desert of eternity.
Lex 1981

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Baby Ruth

(Located at I.O.O.F Cemetery in Neosho. MO)


She has obviously seen some rough times. Thankfully, someone has repaired her in a good way,  no oozy concrete.  She is very pretty and sadly has no last name on her stone. She is resting next to a couple with the last name of Rudy so maybe that's her last name.  I have been unable to find any info about her.  But the name makes me think about the candy bar which probably wasn't around during her day.


Thursday, May 20, 2010

Complete With Real Skulls

I found this uniquely beautiful and interesting grave site at the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Eureka Springs, AR.  It belongs to Annie Applemar.  She was 19 years old when she passed in 1991.  I was told that this is an Indian Spirit Bed. I have not been able to find any more information about her or the grave.







Updates


Wednesday, May 19, 2010

1878 Woman College Graduate

I find this pretty amazing. A woman graduating college in a time when women weren't allowed much.  Also a beautiful stone to boot.

Front
(Located in the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Neosho, MO)

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

In Memory of Confederate Dead

(Located in the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Neosho, MO)

Monday, May 17, 2010

Joplin, MO Train Crashes Into Motor Car, Aug 1914

(Located at the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Neosho, MO)