Cemeteries and graveyards, full of love, betrayal, tragic deaths, murder and suicide. What will you find?...

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

May Peabody Osborne - Dig the grave and let me lie



Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.


Memorial to May Peabody Osborne, All Saints Church, Bisham, Berkshire.


"In Memory of May Peabody Osborne beloved wife of Charles Glidden Osborne.  April 14th 1936.
Under the wide and starry sky, dig the grave and let me lie, glad did I live and gladly die.  And I laid me down with a will.
This be the verse you grave for me, here he lies where he longed to be.  Home is the sailor from sea and the hunter home from the hill."





May Peabody Osborne was born May Henderson Peabody on 28th April 1891 at Evanston, Cook County, Illinois, USA to Francis Stuyvesant Peabody and May Henderson.   May first married Addison H Stillwell on 2nd January 1914 at St James Episcopal Church, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, USA.  They were to divorce 1922.

On 1st September 1923 May married her second husband Charles Glidden Osborne and sailed with him and her children from her first marriage,  May Henderson Stillwell, Elizabeth Allison Stillwell and Frances Peabody Stillwell, on the Leviathan to England in the October of 1923.  In 1928 May and Charles had their only child together, Mahmea Enid Lolita Osborne.

May Peabody Obsborne died on 14th April 1936 in Marlow, Buckinghamshire aged just 44 years old.

It was the verse on May's gravestone that caught my eye first.  The line, 'under the wide and starry sky, dig the grave and let me lie', struck a cord with me.

For more Taphophile Tragics, please click here.
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Sunday, 9 September 2012

Cemetery Sunday - Bosley, Father and Daughter

John Bosley

Jane Bosley

In loving memory of John Bosley who died January 11th 1865 aged 77 years. -  My Redeemer Liveth.

Sacred to the memory of Jane eldest daughter of John and Eliza Bosley who departed this life February 7th 1854 aged 22 years.

Buried side by side in St James the Less churchyard in Stubbings, Burchetts Green, Berkshire.

John Bosley was a master bricklayer employing 6 men.  He was married to Eliza Stroud and their eldest daughter Jane was born in 1833.



Why not join me every Sunday and show off some of your cemetery photography?  The Linky is open to anyone that enjoys snapping cemeteries, graveyards, tombs and churches.  Please visit other contributors and say, 'Hi.'

Tuesday, 4 September 2012

Adeline Blanche and Thomas Young



Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.


Monument to Adeline Blanche Young and Thomas Young, All Saints Church, Bisham, Berkshire.


"In Loving Memory of Adeline Blanche wife of Thomas Young who Died November 14. 1922.  Aged 52 years.  Also of Thomas Young who Died May 18th 1932 in his 70th year."



Adeline Blanche Young was born Adeline Blanche Strafford on 3rd February 1870 in Middlesex to Thomas William Strafford, an insurance clerk at Westminster Fire Office and Eliza Rutland.  Adeline remained with her family until she married Thomas Young on 2nd June 1904 at the age of 41.  On the 1911 census Adeline can be found living with her husband Thomas at Warren House, Bisham, Berkshire.  Eleven years later Adeline was to pass away at the age of 52.

Thomas Young was born in Hackney, London in 1863 to Thomas Young and his wife Margaret.  On the 1911 census Thomas's occupation is listed as surveyor of insurance.  Maybe Thomas Young worked at the same company as Adeline's father.  Unfortunately I was unable to find out much more about Adeline and Thomas.




For more Taphophile Tragics, please click here.
For more Tombstone Tuesday posts, pleace click here.

Sunday, 2 September 2012

Cemetery Sunday - Stone Faces

 
 
Stone faces carved onto the walls of St Luke's Church, Maidenhead Berkshire.









Friday, 31 August 2012

Guest Post - Greenbank Cemetery Bristol



Emily Davis from Invasion Of The Creeps writes about her visit to Greenbank Cemetery in Bristol.

"Greenbank Cemetery was the first large cemetery after Arnos Cemetery to be set up in Bristol in 1871. It was extended in 1880 and again in 1899. In the north eastern section of the cemetery are the memorials to the civilians who died during the Bristol Blitz. Greenbank cemetery also contains a military cemetery from British and Commonwealth servicemen as well as graves of a German Luftwaffe crew killed during the Blitz. The Commonwealth War Graves commission indicates that 178 First World War and 129 Second World War casualities are commemorated at Greenbank Cemetery."










"The pics were just taken on my little hand held digital one sunny afternoon about 4 years ago and I was looking for graves with interesting carvings more than details.  The central chapel, which I don't have any pics of is in a dreadful state of repair, and I know some of the graves have been moved over to Canford."

 



 

"It is a beautiful place. Very peaceful and well kept. There is a proper gate and gatehouse, and paths that lead of to the left and older parts of the cemetery, to the right and the newer grave, and a drive that leads straight ahead and up to the central abandonded chapel. On the way up this drive is an avenue of angels and the like on high memorial plinths. There are angels everywhere in the cemetery. A lot of the older families have elaborate tombs."








All photgraphs copyright of Emily Davis and reproduced with permission.


To read more from Emily, please visit her blog at Invasion Of The Creeps.

Wednesday, 29 August 2012

Tuesday, 28 August 2012

Ann Green - 106 Years Young





Taphophilia is a passion for and enjoyment of cemeteries. The singular term is a taphophile.


Monument to Ann Green, All Saints Churchyard, Bisham Berkshire.


"In Memory of Ann Green.  For many yeard the faithful housekepper at Temple House.  Who departed this life the 4th of February 1862 aged 106 years."




Ann Green was born in Ireland around 1756 which makes researching her ealry life very difficult.  She appears on the 1861 Bisham cenus aged 105 as a widow boaring with Thomas and Maragret Smith near Temple Lodge, Bisham Berkshire.  As I don't have a maiden name for Ann and I haven't been able to find her on the 1841 and 1851 census returns, my research has hit a brick wall.


Temple House, Bisham

Temple house was a large manor house built by Samuel Wyatt for the mill owner Thomas Williams in the late 18th century.  The Williams were a very important family in Bisham with many of the men entering into politics.  It seems that they were very fond of Ann, making sure she had a beautiful marker for her final resting place.


For more Taphophile Tragics, please click here.

Sunday, 26 August 2012

Cemetery Sunday - Broken

Broken Cross - All Saints Churchyard


A selection of broken or damaged gravestones I have come across on my cemetery wanderings.

There are many factors that contribute, vandalism, weathering, poor maintenance and local authorities pushing over stones in the interests of health and safety.









 
 

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