Cemeteries, Ladybusiness, Photography

Wife

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Wife of V. C. Durant Jan. 25, 1873 — July 9, 1901
Cedar City Cemetery, Austin, Mower County, Minnesota

Would it have been that difficult to give the poor woman a name on her headstone, instead of just listing her job description? (The top of the stone is engraved with “Watkins,” which is presumably her maiden name.)

ETA: AHA! A little more digging turns up that her name was Elda. She’s in the 1900 census, living with her husband (Claud V. Durant) and his parents at 811 South Warren Street, Mason City, Iowa. And her maiden name is Watkins. She shows up again in the 1880 census, living in Austin, Minnesota, with her parents, Abram and Phebe Watkins and siblings, Frank Watkins (11 years old), Jennie Watkins (9 years old), Laura Watkins (5 years old), and Annie Watkins (1 year old).

There was at least one other sibling, brother Leonard A. Watkins, who was born just after the 1880 census. Another daughter, Margie Watkins (11 years old), is listed in the 1895 Minnesota State Census.

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Our Darling Leonard A. Son of Abram & Phebi Watkins, born Oct. 13, 1880 died Aug. 3, 1881

I take this little lamb, said He
And lay him on my breast,
Protection he shall find in Me
And be forever blest.

Cemeteries, Genealogy, Photography

Family Headstones

Finally, headstones from my own family. I took these in Minnesota last week. The first is my grandpa’s parents, the second is my grandma’s mother, the third is my great-great aunt, and the last is my uncle.

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Cecil John May 17, 1904 — Sept. 30, 1988 & Clarice Marie (Lord) March 21, 1906 — April 4, 1996
Cedar City Cemetery, Austin, Mower County, Minnesota

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Helen Gertrude (Basquille) Thompson Apr. 22, 1895 — July 1, 1974
Calvary Cemetery, Austin, Mower County, Minnesota

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Margaret Desales (Basquille) Pooser 1889 — 1976
Calvary Cemetery, Austin, Mower County, Minnesota

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Anthony Meineke 1956 — 1984
Calvary Cemetery, Austin, Mower County, Minnesota

Cemeteries, Photography

Liberty Methodist Protestant Church

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Liberty Methodist Protestant Church, Monroe County, Indiana

I spent the day uploading almost 200 photos to Findagrave. My backlog is almost caught up. I still have a handful of photos left to transcribe and upload, but those were taken just a few weeks ago, at Mount Gilead Cemetery. All the old ones are FINISHED. I even submitted GPS coordinates to Findagrave for the cemeteries that were lacking them, as well as notifying them of some duplicate cemetery records. Liberty Methodist, for example, had not only two different entries in Monroe County, but someone had added a third one for Owen County. The more the merrier, I guess!

Cemeteries, Photography

Margaret Bonewell

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Margaret A. Wife of E. Bonewell Born Apr. 17, 1830. Died Apr. 4, 1892.
Mount Moriah Cemetery, Bucklew Road, Spencer, Owen County, Indiana

I’m slowly uploading photos I took last spring to Findagrave. I finished Bethel and River Hill Cemeteries last week and am currently working on Mount Moriah. It’s a tedious, time-consuming job, which is why I’m so far behind on it[1]. It’s not made any easier by the fact that in one section of the cemetery, the stones have discolored. I have no idea whether there’s something strange about the composition of the stone itself or maybe someone tried to clean the markers with something that caused an unfortunate chemical reaction or what. Whatever the cause, there are a bunch of blackened stones there.

I was tempted not to even try photographing them, because the inscriptions were almost impossible to make out. I’m glad I did, though. The photos aren’t great, but they are fairly well legible. Someone else uploaded images from the same cemetery to Findagrave but didn’t include the blackened stones. I wonder if she even tried photographing them?

Alsotoo, this is why I sometimes take some of my headstone photos at such weird angles. I’m trying to make the light work for me, to get as much contrast from shadows and highlights as possible. If I’d taken a head-on photo of the above stone, it would have just been a solid black mess.

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1. First, the images have to be processed, to make the inscriptions as legible as possible. Then I upload them to Flickr and transcribe them. During the transcriptions, I have to do a lot of searching at Ancestry to make sure I’m interpreting the dates as correctly as possible. And then I re-upload them to Findagrave. If someone else has already created a record for the person, it’s pretty straightforward to add an image. If not, I have to create a new record and add the headstone image and inscription.

And before any of that can be done, I have to get out and take the images, which involves trying to figure out which cemeteries are the least well documented but also accessible (not on private property). I also have to look at satellite images, to try to figure out how large the cemetery is. I’m trying to visit just the smaller ones at this point, because they seem to be the most overlooked. If I ever run out of smaller graveyards, I’ll move onto larger ones, but I don’t think that’s going to happen any time soon.