Here's a man a long way from home. Cemetery at Dunwich North Stradbroke Island. Queensland.
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Here's a man a long way from home. Cemetery at Dunwich North Stradbroke Island. Queensland.
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without freedom of speech, we wouldn't know who the idiots are.
One gravestone I found on a lonely forested ridge along the Appalachian Trail in Tennessee stuck with me. The inscription read:
Old Nick Grindstaff
Lived Alone.
Suffered Alone.
Died Alone.
Tom
Another one.
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without freedom of speech, we wouldn't know who the idiots are.
I saw this on the Skeleton Coast, Namibia.
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In the same cemetery as my great great grandfather, there is this stone:
"O, silent grave to thee we trust This precious part of earthly dust. Gaurd [sic] it safe O sacred tomb. Till we their Children ask for room"
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Great great grandfather's brother has a historical marker commemorating his murder:
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What's not on a boat costs nothing, weighs nothing, and can't break
The grave stones of some canoe builders had canoes on them like George R. "Steve" Stephenson at https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/...e-r-stephenson and https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/...-edwin-wickett for Alfred Edwin Wickett who had a canoe instead of a dash between his dates.
Benson
Last edited by Benson Gray; 03-14-2023 at 03:05 PM.
The father of powerboating. Trinity Church, NYC.
Kevin
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There are two kinds of boaters: those who have run aground, and those who lie about it.
Came across this 18 century graveyard bushwalking top of the Myall Lakes.
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The Emigrant.
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And some of the Typhus graves.
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without freedom of speech, we wouldn't know who the idiots are.
Somewhere out walking during an Eggemoggin Reach cruise on Nat Benjamin’s Charlotte in 2008.
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See https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/...ary-calderwood for more details. This says "The family of Samuel & Mary took in a shipwrecked sailor who was ill. Within a short period of time, the family lost five (!) children to this." It appears that only two children may have lived longer than she did.
Benson
Last edited by Benson Gray; 03-17-2023 at 11:04 AM.
I believe that is the same churchyard on Wall Street where Alexander Hamilton is buried, right near the fence.
Not gravestone, but I was surprised to see this at the Tambourine Rainforest Skywalk nature park in Queensland:
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I came across an abandoned graveyard in Tasmania with the grave of 6 children who died of diphtheria in4 days, and their mother.
This site is an amazing resource. I found it when researching my family tree as they had the complete list of my ancestors dating back to the early 16 hundreds in Sheffield Uk. The section of the website that housed the family trees is now hosted elsewhere but for a collection of interesting headstones, there are many to be found here:
http://www.gravesoftas.com.au
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. Leonardo da Vinci.
If war is the answer........... it must be a profoundly stupid question.
"Freighters on the nod on the surface of the bay, One of these days we're going to sail away"
Bruce Cockburn