graves
This is the grave of Thomas Moss. Thomas Moss was born into slavery in Mississippi in 1853. Like many Black people after slavery, he headed north to Memphis, where he.
This is the grave of Mary Colter. Born to a reasonably well-off family in Pittsburgh in 1869, Colter's family moved around a bit when she was a child, first to.
This is the grave of Deborah Sampson Gannett. Born in 1760 in Plimpton, Massachusetts, Deborah Sampson grew up with long Puritan roots that reached back to William Bradford. But the.
This is the grave of Hannah Arendt. Born in 1906 in Linden, Germany, Arendt grew up in a prominent Jewish family in Konigsberg. The family were anti-Zionist and largely secular.
This is the grave of Mollie, Maud, and Maggie, all horses. The only way to explain this is through the marker at the site. I had no idea this existed..
This is the grave of Daniel Schorr. Born in 1916 in The Bronx, Schorr would have been Daniel Tchornemoretz if his parents hadn't simplified their name in English (or had.
This is the grave of Edmond Meany. Born in 1862 in East Saginaw, Michigan, Meany moved out to Washington Territory at some point during his early life, I think in.
This is the grave of Sonny Boy Williamson. Born at some point in the late nineteenth or early twentieth century and probably either in Greenwood or Glendora, Mississippi, Aleck Miller,.