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Secrets
in cemetery offices: A cemetery office assistant can help you
track down key bits of information like your ancestor’s death date,
burial date and even next of kin (complete with accompanying historical
records). Finding something as simple as a death certificate or a marriage
date can lead you to other important biographical records. On a similar
strain, you might also try the library or Internet. Cemetery surveys are
often housed in libraries or posted online.
What
a tombstone can tell: There are your basic inscriptions like
names, birth date, and death date. But what about enigmatic symbols like
a compass or crescent moon? It could be that your great-grandfather was
a Freemason or a Shriner. Other symbols like an anchor (indicating a mariner),
or an open bible (a minister) will reveal the career or interests of your
ancestors. Also, make sure you check the back of every tombstone. Family
members sharing burial plots would often share tombstones.
Unusual
grave markers: Antiquated grave markers reveal much about the
life and times of certain ancestors. Footstones, for example, were commonly
added to gravesites from the nineteenth century (purportedly to keep coffin-less
feet from making an appearance aboveground). Other variations on the traditional
tombstone included box tombs, body stones (a throwback to medieval times),
tomb tables (popular in the American Colonial era), and barrel vaults.
Skeletons
in your closest: Beware of digging too deep. You’re likely
to uncover some morbid information. One particularly good story involves
a historian who managed to locate an obituary based on records she obtained
from a cemetery office. The obituary revealed that her great-aunt had
been murdered by her great-uncle.
Who are YOUR ancestors? Click here to find out.
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