17 March 2011

Happy St. Patrick's Day

A few Celtic-motifed headstones for the holiday.

From Mt. Hope Cemetery in Rochester, NY:


Frank Gannett founded the Gannett media corporation, and has an awesome Celtic knot and laser-etched paperboy marking his plot.

Previously posted:
The epitaph reads, "I gconai agus go brach" ("I gcónaí agus go brách" if you want the proper accents) and apparently means "Always and forever."


From Forest Hill Cemetery, Utica, NY:

08 March 2011

Epitaph extravaganza

100th post, right here.

From Liverpool Cemetery, Liverpool, NY:

Loves last token


From South Onondaga Cemetery, Syracuse, NY area:

 Arthur S. 1885-1908

A precious one from
us has gone
The voice beloved
is stilled
A place is vacant
in our home
which never can
be filled.





Of life the tiresom [sic] journey's past.
We drop into the tomb at last:
Great Inn; where all our sorrows cease
And kings & peasants rest in peace.







Afflictions so
Long time I bore

Physicians were in vain
Till God was pleas'd
To give me ease,
And free me from
my pain.








From Oakland Cemetery, Atlanta, GA:

Annie Lowry Porter
Born Feb. 13, 1873; Died Nov. 15, 1874


Fannie Lowry Porter
Born Nov. 5, 1877; Died May 11, 1879

They were little sunbeams
That shone upon our way;
And cheered us but a moment
Ere they passed away.




Samuel Davis Haslett McDaniel
May 15, 1896
Sept. 14, 1983
A lover of people. A fighter to the end. God be with him til we meet again.









From Mt. Hope Cemetery, Rochester, NY:

 


George W. Aldridge
Born December 28, 1856
Died while serving the United States
as Collector of the Port of New York
June 13, 1922






On the reverse:
An expression of sorrow and farewell
to a great leader and a true friend



From Rome Cemetery, Rome, NY:


 
Detail:
"Even for the dead I will not bind
My soul to grief, death cannot long divide,
For is it not as if the rose that climbed
My garden wall had bloomed the other side?"