Delving into the past is a great way to make sense of the
present, to learn about the past, or to simply enjoy piecing together what
people before us did. My husband and I did this recently when we traveled to
his hometown to bury a former classmate. In our spare time, we visited some of
the local cemeteries to find graves of my husband’s family. Because his
hometown is a small city with many rural communities surrounding it, we were
not even sure if we could locate the different cemeteries.
We first visited his hometown cemetery where his parents and
one brother were buried. We put flowers there, then with only the name of small
rural cemetery and directions from one of his friends, we headed out.
It was a gorgeous, crisp autumn day making our drive quite
enjoyable. We drove down winding tree-lined lanes and into what seemed to me to
be a long forgotten area of the world. Occasionally we came upon neat little
homes with large, well-kept yards. It surprised me how people today could live
away from towns, but as my husband says, “It would be a boring world if
everyone liked the same thing.”
Finally, we came upon a little white church with a high
steeple sitting next to a fence-in graveyard.
We got out and started walking
down the small rows of graves and were amazed to find a half row of tombstones
with his family name on them. Some of these markers had been there for well
over a hundred years. We found his grandfather’s headstone. As the story goes, his
grandfather was killed by a family member while his grandfather was robbing the
other man’s trot lines. He had been buried at the young age of 28 in 1922. The
man, who supposedly killed him, lived to be 67 and was buried just a feet away.
If the story is true, I guess in the early 1900’s, it was okay to shoot someone
stealing from your trot lines.
We found graves of Civil War soldiers and of many, many
babies. One man had four infant graves next to his with only the identifying
words of Infant and the last name. The lack of medical advancement during those
years was a harsh reality. Even my
mother-in-law had lost a baby at birth, and on the second day of our search, we
visited a third cemetery and found a tiny little marker with his brother’s name
on it.
Visiting cemeteries isn’t something my husband and I
normally do, but the time we spent on that day was quite meaningful. As we
drove away from all the cemeteries, my mind and my heart went out to the
families of those people buried there. Sometimes we forgot our ancestors and
the people we read about in history books were actual people who lived and
breathed, suffered and rejoiced, loved and mourned just as we do today.
Fran McNabb writes light romances and is waiting for her
eighth book, KEEPING HOPE ALIVE, to be published by The Wild Rose Press. Visit her at www.FranMcNabb.com or at mcnabbf@bellsouth.net.