Paschall’s Witnessing a UFO Crash?

By Linda Stewart, 23 January 2019

I once read that in genealogy the most important thing is the dash between the date of birth and the date of death.  The dash represents the person’s life.  Family history books are more valuable than gold to a researcher, but it is the dash that tells the story.  Reading newspapers is an excellent way of finding a piece of the dash.

The town of Aurora in Wise County, Texas, was where Lunsford Stanhope Paschall, as well as his son John Thomas “Jack” Paschall, owned land.  Jack and his wife Ellender Josephine Goodger Paschall had nine children.  Lunsford died in 1895, but his wife Tabitha Frances Paschall was still living.  A very interesting incident occur on Saturday, April 17, 1897 at 6 o’clock in the morning. Since Jack and several members of the Paschall family lived in the area, it is probable that they may have been part of the witnesses to the event.

An article written by S. E. Haydon, published in the Dallas Morning News, “A Windmill Demolishes It.”  Aurora, Wise co., Tex., April 17 (to The News.) — About 6 o’clock this morning the early risers of Aurora were astonished at the sudden appearance of the airship which has been sailing through the country.  It was traveling due north and much nearer the earth than ever before.  Evidently some of the machinery was out of order, for it was making a speed of only ten or twelve miles an hour and gradually settling toward the earth.  It sailed directly over the public square, and when it reached the north part of town collided with the tower of Judge Proctor’s windmill and went to pieces with a terrific explosion, scattering debris over several acres of ground, wreaking the windmill and water tank and destroying the Judge’s flower garden. 

The pilot of the ship is supposed to have been the only one on board, and while his remains are badly disfigured, enough of the original has been picked up to show that he was not an inhabitant of this world.  Mr. T. J. Weeins, the United States signal service officer at this place and an authority on astronomy, gives it as his opinion that he was a native of the planet Mars.  Papers found on his person — evidently the record of his travels — are written in some unknown hieroglyphics, and cannot be deciphered.  The ship was too badly wrecked to form any conclusion as to its construction or motive power.  It was built of an unknown metal, resembling somewhat a mixture of aluminum and silver, and it must weigh several tons. 

The town is full of people today who are viewing the wreck and gathering specimens of the strange metal from the debris.  The pilot’s funeral will take place at noon tomorrow.

Another Dallas Morning News article, which was published two days after the crash, said that the pilot’s funeral would take place on April 18.   The Fort Worth Register News article said, The pilot, who was not an inhabitant of this world, was given proper Christian burial at the Aurora Cemetery.

Other Paschall relatives buried in the Aurora Cemetery include: David Allen Cobb, James Allen Cobb, and James’ infant son.

So visit https://www.newspapers.com/ and look to see if you can find a piece of your relative’s dash.

Happy Hunting!

Happy Thanksgiving – Enjoy the recipes from the Grandmothers of old

By Linda Stewart, 21 November 2018

Genealogy is not about just the names and dates of our ancestors, it is about the treasurers they left to us. Our values and traditions.  That picture or piece of crochet.  This holiday season I would like to share some recipes from two of my grandmothers.  I hope your family enjoys them as much as my family has.

Happy Hunting!

Gingerbread Cake – Ruth McKinney Beard Paschall

1 egg

1 cup sugar

1/2 cup butter

1/2 cup Crisco

1 cup Steens syrup

2 1/2 cups flour

1 1/2 tsp baking soda

1 tsp cinnamon

1 teaspoon ginger

1/2 tsp salt

1 cup HOT water

Mix the above ingredients together then add 1 cup HOT water.  Mix well.  Pour into a greased and floured baking dish.  Bake at 325 degrees for 30 minutes or until done.

Once the cake was cooled, grandma would serve it with a spoon full of whipping cream on top.  So good ….

Tea Cookies – Nellie Shelton Sherman

1 cup shortening

2 cups sugar

3 eggs

2 tsp baking powder

2 tsp vanilla

3 cups flour (or enough to handle well) could go up to 5 cups

Cream sugar and shortening.  Add other ingredients and mix well.  Turn on floured board and work until you can handle.  Roll thin as desired and cut out.  Bake 350 degrees for 15 minutes or until brown.

The tea cookies are good as is, or you can sprinkle them with sugar before baking, or you can decorate them with icing after baking.  Enjoy!

Happy Veterans Day – Thank You For Your Service.

By Linda Stewart, 12 November 2018

According to Veterans Day Facts, “Veterans Day originated as “Armistice Day” on Nov. 11, 1919, the first anniversary of the end of World War I. Congress passed a resolution in 1926 for an annual observance, and Nov. 11 became a national holiday beginning in 1938. Unlike Memorial Day, Veterans Day pays tribute to all American veterans—living or dead—but especially gives thanks to living veterans who served their country honorably during war or peacetime.”

I want to honor the 153 Veterans who are featured in the “John T. Paschall and his wife Mary Cook Paschall, Two Hundred Years of Our Family’s History” book.  Most of them have gone home to be with the Lord.

Troy Preston Allen, Thomas Mitchell Anderson, Delbert Monroe Artherholt, Danny Lee Artherholt, Danny Lee Artherholt Jr., Donald Clinton Artherholt,  Arthur Dee Bean, Jr., Claude Melvin Bean, Ronald Chester Bean, John Frederick Belew, Jr., David Lee Bell, Charles Merwyn Blakely, Paul Merwin Blakely, Adron Eldrige Blythe, Robert Andrew Bowman, Robert Andrew Bowman, Jr., Fred Oran Briscoe, Joe Alton Brugger, Arvel B. Bush, James Steve Cannon, Lloyd Donald Cannon, William Claude Cannon, Robert Cheatham, Patricia Bean Clark, Claude William Colwell, Samuel B. Combs, Alvin Wesley Crisp, Jr., Horace Valentine Dean, Nolen Richard Dean, James Conrad Deen, Jordan Clarence Dunlap, William Marion Fletcher, Eugene Denis Fletcher, John George Fratus, William Vincent Freitas, Buford Russell Frith, Finis Eugene Gibson, Archie Orville Gray, Billy Beckham Hamer, Thomas James Hanson, Donnie Dale Hardwick, Curtis Grant Harrell, Forrest Devoy Harrell, Truman Riley Harris, William Herman Harris, Justin Lewis Hart, Marcell T. Haxthausen, Columbus C. High, Harry Jim High, Rufus Morgan High, Bobby Gene Hodge, Marvin Jordan Holmes, Jesse Johnson, Jewel Ethel Johnson, Albert George Jones, Charles Powell Jones, Leonard V. Keller, Marjorie Mae Meek Lambert, Deane M. Lambert, Grover William Landers, John Thomas Langham, Vincent Henri Leyva, Crystal Eugene Lindsey, Emma Lou Lindsey, Oliver Chatman Lindsey, John Melvin Long, Eugene Edward Loving, Samuel Edward Loving, Maurice Lee MaGee, Curtis Odell McDonald, Arthur Glen Mahone, Carl Odell Mahula, Curtis Mathis Mahula, James Thomas Mahula, Hardy Roy Martin, James Hershell Martin, Marion R. Martin, Clarence Rambo Meek, Frank Craig Meek, Gerald Cunningham Meek, Rueben Matherson Meek, John Denver Milliken, Lawrence Benjamin Morris, William Stephen Newsom, Ralph Paschall Noah, James Burton Paschal, Charles James Cook Paschall, Charles Ray Paschall, Charles William Paschall, Darrell Dean Paschall, Edwin Anderson Paschall, Floyd Roland Paschall, Frank Stamps Paschall, George Washington Paschall, Jr., Henry Austin Paschall, James Brice Paschall, John Clinton Paschall, John J. Paschall, Julius Ward Paschall, Lawrence Stanford Paschall, Jr., Lunsford Stanhope Paschall, Montgomery Pike Paschall, Omer Clyde Paschall, Robert Anderson Paschall, William Thomas Paschall, Wilmer Larue Paschall, Wyatt Howard Paschall, Ray Porter,  Leslie E. Reagor, Jack Arnold Reid, William Harold Reid, William Harold Reid, Jr., Douglas Lee Rice, Winnie Ridgway Rice, Spencer Wilder Ridgway, Steve Houston Ridgway, Herman Paul Riley, Jack Fouch Riley, Jr., Tommie Jack Riley, Wintferd Cleo Riley, Leldon James Rogers, Henry Elmer Robinson, Lester Eugene Rogers, Thomas Eli Rogers, Bobby Lee Rutledge, James R. Rutledge, Jackie Sanders, Wyatt Howard Schelsteder, Billie Joe Sherbert, Joseph Grady Sherbert, Jeff Simmons, Jim Simmons, John Simmons, Mary Simmons, Pete Simmons, Steven Simmons, Tammy Simmons, Ted Simmons, Vivian Simmons, Steve Smith, Edward T. Southerland, Lunce Loving Stallons, William Thomas Stanley, Manton Stewart, Francis Marion Stubbs, Jr., Stanley Larue Stubbs,  Lloyd Turner Tabor, Edward Ted Teague, Walter Alvin Teague, Edward Dean Thibodeaux, Arthur Jesse Van Arman, Edward Lee Weeden, Hershell Olan Wilson.

I think the hardest part of researching the John T. Paschall book was the research on the wars.  Each of these men and women have a story to tell.  Here is one such story …

Arthur Mahone was a member of HQ Company, 192nd Tank Battalion. He was a Japanese Prisoner of War who was selected for transport to Japan, from the Philippines, in early October 1944. His POW detachment was sent to the Port Area of Manila. The ship his detachment was scheduled to sail on was ready to depart, but the entire detachment had not arrived.  Another POW detachment was not ready to sail but their ship was. The Japanese swapped POW detachments so the ship could sail.

1,803 Prisoners of War were boarded onto the Arisan Maru on October 11, 1944. The ship sailed and anchored in a cove off Palawan Island. It returned to Manila ten days later where it sailed as part of a convoy. On October 24, 1944, late in the day, the ship was in the Bashi Channel of the South China Sea. The POWs, on deck preparing dinner, watched the Japanese run to the bow of the ship a torpedo passed in front of the ship. Moments later, the guards ran to the stern as another torpedo passed behind the ship. The ship shook and came to a stop. It had been hit by two torpedoes amidships. The POWs were forced back into the holds and the Japanese covered the hatch openings with their covers. They then abandoned ship.

After the Japanese were gone the POWs climbed onto the deck. Most had survived the attack. Those POWs who could not swim raided the food lockers. They wanted to die with full stomachs. For two hours, the ship got lower and lower in the water. At some point, it broke in two. POWs took to the water on anything that floated. Some swam to nearby Japanese ships, but they were pushed away by Japanese sailors with poles. Five men found an abandoned lifeboat that had no oars. During the night, they heard the cries for help which faded away until there was silence. Only nine men survived the sinking. Eight survived to the end of the war.  Submitted to Findagrave, memorial ID #64924959, courtesy of JimO.

Happy Veterans Day – Thank You For Your Service.

Happy Hunting!

African American Paschall’s in the 1872 North Carolina State Legislator

By Linda Stewart, 28 September 2018

North Carolina State Legislators 1872.  Photo courtesy of Marlene Parker.

In an article entitled “General Assembly” by David A. Norris, which is from the Encyclopedia of North Carolina edited by William S. Powell, it gives the history of the General Assembly and states African Americans were first elected to the Assembly during Reconstruction (1865-77).  The North Carolina Constitutional Convention that was held in early 1868 chose 107 Republicans and 13 Democrats. Thirteen Black Republicans represented nineteen majority Black counties.  For more information about the African American Political Pioneers, there is an excellent article Constitutional Convention, 1868: “Black Caucus” By Earl Ijames online at https://www.ncpedia.org/history/cw-1900/black-caucus

These distinguished African American men include John M. Paschall, and his kinsman J. Wm. H. Paschall.

An article appeared in the Tri-Weekly Era, (Raleigh, North Carolina) – Tuesday, July 2, 1872, Page 1.

Republican Convention in Warren – In pursuance to previous notes, the Republicans of Warren county met in Convention in the Court House in Warrenton on Saturday 15th Inst., for the purpose of nominating a Senator, two Representatives and the Republican ticket for the other county offices.

The Convention was called to order by Mr. John A. Hyman [Black], and organized by calling John M. Paschall, Esq., to the Chari, and requesting J. Wm. H. Paschall to act as Secretary.  After a few appropriate remarks by the Chairman, the roll of the townships was called, and every township was represented.  Each candidate for the Legislature being called for came forward and addressed the Convention in brief speeches.

On motion, a committee consisting of one delegate from each township was appointed to suggest the names of the most suitable and ablest men to fill the various offices of the county and Legislature.  During the absence of the committee telling speeches were delivered by John A. Hyman and others.  The committee returned and submitted their report through the Secretary, which was taken up and voted on when the following named persons were nominated, viz;

Senate – John A. Hyman, by acclamation

House of Representatives – Geo. H. King and J. Wm. H. Paschal.

Sheriff – N. R. Jones

Treasurer – J. C. McCraw

Register of Deeds – J. H. Bennett

Coroner – Benjamin Cook

Surveyor – Jas. A. Egerton

Commissioners – Alexander L. Steed, — Williams, John M. Paschall, John Read, and Alexander Wright.

Warren will poll an increased majority in August next, for the State Republican ticket and for Gen. Grant in November.

                                JOHN M. PASCHALL, Chm’n.

J. Wm. H. Paschall, Sec’y

John M. Paschall also served as the 19th District Republican Senator for Warren County, NC for the year 1874.

John served his community in various aspects.  In 1870, he was a teacher at the Mount Pleasant public school in North Carolina.  In 1873, John, as well as John William Henry, and Thomas P. Paschall, all served a Justices of the Peace.  In addition to being a Senator, John was also a Baptist Minister.

One 25 December 1856, John Monroe Paschall married Mary Jane Wright, and they had eleven children.  One of their daughter’s, Annie Eula, attended five years at the Shaw University in Raleigh, N.C.   You can read her story in “Who’s who among the colored Baptists of the United States, Volume I”, by Bacote, Samuel William, ed. 1913. Page 230.  https://archive.org/details/whoswhoamongcolo00baco/page/n7?q=%22Who%27s+who+among+the+colored+Baptists+of+the+United+States%2C+Volume+I%22

John, listed as mulatto on the census records, was born ca 1827 in North Carolina and died in 1886.   His obituary reads John M. Paschall, colored, of this county, at one time a member of the Legislature, died last Thursday night.  Deceased was a very respectable and intelligent colored man.  The Wilmington Morning Star, (Wilmington, North Carolina) – Saturday, April 3, 1886, Page 1.

         

John Monroe Paschall            Mary Jane Wright Paschall            Photos courtesy of Marlene Parker

Happy Hunting!

Daughters of Mary Ham Paschall – Lessons Lost to Time

By Linda Stewart, 28 September 2018

John T. and Mary Cook Paschall’s first child was Robert Anderson Paschall.  He married Mary A. Ham, who was the daughter of Young Davis Ham and Susannah Clark.  Robert and Mary were very well educated and they made sure their children were also educated.   In addition to everyday life lessons of cleaning, cooking, and sewing, it would appear that Mary also taught her daughters about midwifery and herbal medicine.

One of their daughter’s Mary Ann Frances Paschall Fletcher was a midwife who lived in Texas.  She would deliver the baby and stay with the new mother for a month helping her until she was well enough to take care of her family.

Another daughter, Amanda N. Paschall Newsom was a healer with herbs.  Her family lived in Texas and later moved to Oklahoma.  On 17 May 1937, Amanda’s son Thomas was interviewed by John F. Daugherty for the Indian Pioneer History Collection in Oklahoma Historical Society.  He said, “When we got sick, mother went to the prairies and gets menna leaves, horehound, balimony [sic] weed, dogwood, celindia, and black haw.  She boiled those and made a tea, which we had to drink.  It was a bad dose, but it certainly cured our minor ailments.  There were no doctors at that time.  I didn’t know what a doctor was until I was twenty years old.”

Today, you can still take classes to learn to be a midwife and a herbalist, but these everyday lessons that were taught by our pioneer grandmothers to their daughters have been lost to time.

If you have any medicinal recipes or grandma’ remedies that you would like to share, please let us know by leaving us a comment.

Happy Hunting!

Judge George W. Paschall

By Linda Stewart, 11 September 2018

The Atlanta Constitution, (Atlanta, Georgia) – Sunday, August 5, 1894, Page 433

Recent references to the late Judge George W. Paschall, from incidents current in Lumpkin county, have called forth a reply from Mr. C. A. Lilly, a kinsman of the judge, the points of which add much to the knowledge gained.  After stating that Judge Paschall did not edit the paper at Nackollsville, Mr. Lilly says:

“Judge Paschall was admitted to the bar in Wilkes county, Georgia, in 1833; was examined for admission by Judge A. B. Longstreet, Francis Cone and Daniel Chandler.  Hon. W. H. Crawford presided at the supreme court at the time.  At the time of Judge Paschal’s marriage, with Miss Sarah Ridge, the daughter of Major John Ridge, which was in February, 1837, he was a soldier of the United States under General Wood, with the rank of captain.  They were married at New Echota.  Major John Ridge was associated chief with John Ross, of the Cherokee nation.  As all know, Major Ridge was a most highly educated and cultivated gentleman.  In the national museum in Washington city there is a fine portrait of Major Ridge.

“Judge Paschall removed to Arkansas with his Indian wife during the year 1837.  While in Arkansas he was judge of the supreme court.

“In 1853,” Mr. Lilly continued, “Judge Paschall removed from Arkansas to Galveston, Tex.  I will say nothing of Judge Paschall’s life after moving to Texas.  His work there is a part of the history of that great state.  I know that Judge Paschall never abandoned his Indian wife, and I never heard of him mysteriously disappearing from any place.  Judge Paschall did prepare and publish an ‘Annotated Constitution of the United States.’  The Mississippi river episode, as regards Judge Paschall hasn’t enough fact in it to base a romance on.  My uncle, Judge Paschall, had three children now living, born of his Indian wife — Colonel George W. Paschall is now a resident of Washington, D. C.

“That is rather a pretty romance,” Mr. Lilly concluded, “about the daughter of Judge Paschall.  She was not a daughter of Judge Paschall’s Indian wife.  She is the child of a second wife of Judge Paschall and a grandchild of Governor Duval, of Florida.  She was married to Hon. T. P. O’Connor before ‘Marse Chan’ was ever written.  Mrs. O’Connor now lives in London.  Her husband is a member of the British parliament.”

 

Death of Lunsford A. Paschall

By Linda Stewart, 11 September 2018

The Torchlight, (Oxford, North Carolina) – Tuesday, August 19, 1879, Page 2

A good man has gone to his reward.  Lunsford A. Paschall was born in Warren County, N. C., March 31st, 1802, and died in Oxford August 12th, 1879.

He was the son of Anderson Paschall, at one time Sheriff of Warren, and his mother was a Twitty, from that county.  He was one of twelve children.  He married Cary Ann Taylor, daughter of the Rev. Louis Taylor, and leaves only one daughter, his only surviving child, Anna C., wife of F. B. Wimbish’ Esq., of Oxford.

His father removing to Granville while Mr. Paschall was a boy, he was brought up in this county and for over fifty years he has been a citizen of Oxford.  From early manhood he has been prominently identified with public affairs in Granville, having served at various periods as Chairman of the County Court, Register of Deeds, Public Administrator and Justice of the Peace, and so bore himself in office and out of office as to win the unbounded confidence and esteem of the community.  Mr. Paschall was a man of sound, vigorous mind, and pre-eminently gifted with that rarest of all qualities — practical, common sense.  He integrity was unquestioned and his benevolence and unselfishness so great that his charities were only limited by his ability to bestow.  With all the intellectual qualities and the energy necessary to accumulate wealth, and with ample opportunities to do so, he preferred to retain in moderate circumstances, and to lay up his treasures, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt and where thieves do not break through and steal.  Instead of hoarding up property, he dispensed his ample earnings in unnumbered acts of judicious charity, only reserving enough to secure a modest competence to himself and family.

For over forty years he had been a communicate of the Church, and died in an assured hope of a blessed immortality.

A good man has gone from our midst, and the whole community mourn his departure.

 

“Just the facts, ma’am”

By Linda Stewart, 8 September 2018

Hopefully the John T. and Mary Cook Paschall book will be printed within the month.  We have had one proof text that has been edited and another proof text has been ordered for the final inspection.  I have always enjoyed books, but now after spending over two years on this project with the writing and editing I have a new appreciation for authors.

I have been told by some people who have read parts of the book that people may not like what is written about their ancestor.  As an author and a researcher, I do not sugar coat my findings.  I only have one exception to my rule, and that is adoption.  If the child does not know they are adopted I do not include that information.  If they do know then the information is included.

In the book, there is a Paschall gentlemen who was a butcher.  He had been in this profession for a number of years.  He owned his own butcher shop, and also sold liquor out of the shop.  Today, we would think nothing of this.  There is a liquor section in every grocery store.  But in the time period he sold the liquor he went to prison for a year, because it was during prohibition.

One of John T. and Mary’s son’s abandoned his young wife and four children.  He moved on and a couple of years later had a new family with children.  The facts say that the son and his first wife were married two years when he went off to war leaving her, now 18 years old, with a one year old baby to raise and a farm to run.  The regiment he was in remained fairly local to the area they lived in.  He received furloughs and came home long enough for her to get pregnant and he returned to his regiment.  In 1865, she was 22 years old, had been married for five years, had four children, and a husband who had been basically absent for three years due to the war.

He came home from the war, but two years later they were separated.  He abandoned her and the children and moved 200 miles away.   Of course we will never know the cause of their separation, but  I can only imagine what emotions this young woman felt … anger, abandonment, grief for a dying marriage, frightened for the well being of her children.  I found documents where she told people she was widowed.  I am sure in her heart he was completely dead to her.  Her parents were both deceased so where was she to go.  She did have siblings, but I did not find any records that she lived with any of them.   I did find records of her living with two different local families in the county where her brothers lived.  The records were sparse for a two year period, then I found birth information for a fifth child.  I am sure people will gasp at the thought of an illegitimate child, but don’t we all want love and compassion even if that decision is not a wise one?  Her story does not have a happy ending as she was killed a year later.

As family researchers, we are to tell the stories of our ancestors.  The facts tell that story.  Family folklore which is the traditional beliefs, customs, and stories of a community, passed through the generations by word of mouth, can be included in your research.  But always make it understood that the story is family folklore and may not be factual.

So in the words of Joe Friday, Dragnet’s 1950’s TV series, “Just the facts, ma’am”.

Happy Hunting!

Unidentified Pictures from the Ruth Beard Paschall Collection

By Linda Stewart, 4 September 2018

When my grandmother, Ruth McKinney Beard Paschall, moved to heaven in 1976.  She had a box full of pictures that was given to me.  My mother Ruth and her brother Raymond identified most of the pictures, but the really old pictures they did not know who the people were.  Once again we would appreciate your help in identifying the pictures.

We do not know if these pictures are of family members or just family friends.

Happy Hunting! – LS

Deer Stands and Graveyards

By Linda Stewart, 4 September 2018

The web site www.findagrave.com is the world’s largest gravesite collection, with over 170 million memorials created by the community since 1995.  Contributors upload pictures of the tombstone, personal data and photographs, give the location of the cemetery, and often make family connections of other deceased relatives posted on the site.

The cemetery associations, as well as the locate funeral homes, keep valuable records on the deceased.  The funeral home records make up the data that is printed in the obituary.  The cemetery associations will have the plot, lot, and space of where the deceased is buried.  Often a family member will purchase a plot which will contain eight lots.  The cemetery records will list the names of the people who are, or will be buried in the plot.  This information will help you make family connections.

Avail yourself to the records of findagrave, cemetery associations, and funeral homes, but don’t forget to visit gravesites.  To me it is a humbling experience to visit where an ancestor has been laid to rest.  It can also be quite the adventure.

Thirty-five years ago, when my husband and I were first married, we belonged to a deer lease in Llano, Texas.  It was a beautiful little town and we enjoyed our time on the lease immensely.  For years we were on the lease with the same families, so year after year we got to see their children grow.    I especially enjoyed when we would spend a week or two on the lease, because while he was sitting in a deer stand hunting deer, I was sitting in a courthouse hunting ancestors.  The adjacent counties to Llano are San Saba to the north, Burnet to the east, Mason to the west, and Gillespie to the south.  These were the counties where my husband’s family had lived during the 1800’s.  Years later I would learn that my Paschall’s and Clarks had also lived in the area.

One particular year my husband wanted to spend two weeks on the lease.  I really did not want to go, but he promised me if I would go and spend two weeks with him on the lease, then on the weekend he would take me to Round Rock and Milano to the cemeteries.  I agreed.

Late Friday night we arrived in Llano.  Saturday and Sunday we enjoyed the fellowship with our friends.  Monday morning I dropped him off at the deer stand and I drove to a courthouse.  The following Saturday morning my husband was getting ready to go to his deer stand when I reminded him of his cemetery promise.  Begrudgingly, we drove east to Round Rock, Texas.

We found the Round Rock City Cemetery and the caretaker was mowing a beautiful cemetery.  We asked where the oldest section of the cemetery was and he pointed in the direction of a field where the grass was chest high.  He told us the association has not maintained the mowing of that section of the cemetery because the graves were in disrepair.  My husband did not want to go into the cemetery, but I would not take no for an answer.  Neither tall grass or snakes would deter me from looking for a rock with initials carved on it.  We go in … he is on one side and I am on the other.  We are basically fussing back and forth when he disappears.  He had fallen into a sunken grave.  After the initial shock, I start laughing.  I take one step and I fall into a sunken grave.  My husband managed to climb out and came to pull me out.  Deciding that he was right, I took a picture of the old section of the cemetery and claimed that my husband’s great-great grandmother was buried there.

We leave Round Rock and head east to Milano, Texas.  By the time we found the cemetery, it was beginning to be dusk.  The cemetery was surrounded by houses.  It was a nice cool evening and we had two flashlights in the car so we decided to hunt the ancestors.  We were walking the rows when the dogs start barking and a little child yelled, “Mama, Mama, there’s somebody in the cemetery!”  I started laughing and tripped over a tombstone.  I turned the light on the stone, there she was, my maternal great-great grandmother.  We returned the next  morning and took pictures of the ancestors tombstones.

We made it back to the deer lease for my husband to hunt Monday morning.  We were bruised and scratched up from our cemetery adventures.  After all these years we still remember falling into those sunken graves, and the voice of that sweet little child … and we are still laughing.

Happy Hunting!