Such a shame to see this! But good to be aware! By the way, Dan said Castoria was actually a laxative, he was thinking of another one at the time. Tip Jar For Gas: www.paypal.me/rwrightphotography Follow me on my old farm: ruclips.net/channel/UC56vh2L-M0czmoTRLhSMaxg eBay Shop: www.ebay.com/usr/oldbyrdfarm Join The Official Sidestep Adventures Fan Group: facebook.com/groups/561758371276581/?ref=share_group_link My flashlight link: www.olightstore.com/s/UPTJSG Save 10 percent: SAIH10 (not valid on sales items and X9R) Mail: Sidestep Adventures PO BOX 206 Waverly Hall, Georgia 31831
Yes, my bad, as much Castoria as my Mother forced upon me as a kid, you’d think I would remember better. But I also had to take Cherocol and Creomulsion for coughs and such, so easy to confuse! -Dan
@danthevictrolaman9830 -Creomulsion is still the only cough syrup that both works for me and doesn't gag me when I take it. I remember giving it to my girls but they don't have the same fond memories of it that I do, lol.
amazing! i do believe you guys found my family . im Jonathan wright im related to the wrights of wrightsville, dublin, eastman soperton Ga. im related to John b wright, my great grandfather was named Clyd wright who had several sons Olin wright was my mamas father. im also related to Brig Gen Ambrose wright of Ga. so excited to see this Guys! great job
I'm here for the same reason. Paternal line's family name is Wright. They were enslaved in Georgia so I only have written documentation going back to 1870.
I have to consult my genealogy and see if I am related to this line of Wrights. One line is iffy but a big family from Georgia packed up and went to Texas.
@@wandapease-gi8yoI enjoy Robert and Dan's videos. I went to school with some Wrights in Kountze Texas and they also lived a few miles from my family.
Some Wrights from Georgia settled here in Comanche county Texas. It's where I grew up and when I retired moved back to. Another interesting fact is John Wesley Hardin and his family are from Comanche. The evening, Sherriff Webb of Brown County was killed by Hardin, it happened in Jack Wrights Saloon here in Comanche Texas
Like I said regardless of the dark or the light of history in the United States of America this is awesome that this man was able to see through the other two men that found his family's grave site. And this is all the reason why we need to do this as a country and save this information regardless of the HISTORY. And for the next couple hundreds of years of generation after us and they dig whatever is left and say what's going on here we don't have any information everything was swept under the rug even if it was good or bad so what are we looking at knowing this is American history know we need to know this now and we need to is Now! 🇺🇲
When Dan was describing at the beginning how he knew it was an old homestead with all the different plants and trees around the house all I could think of was the Walton's house in the TV show. It would have been so amazing to live back in those days in such a simple way. It's a shame so much of that lifestyle is gone. Our lives have changed so much.
Lots of tender loving care went into making that grave. Like Dan, I thought it was brick work until he noted otherwise. I wonder if it was family/friends who made it, or "professionals".🤔 I really enjoy how you discover old homesites! You know what markers to look for. Thankfully those markers are still there and identifiable. I wish I would've grown up around there when I was a kid. I'da had a blast! We lived across from fields (in Oregon) and I liked to explore as best as I could. I played in the irrigation ditch next to our house - when it was empty and dry, of course. Great memories! Then we moved to the suburbs in California. And here I've stayed.😕 Your daughter is so fortunate to get to grow up like her dad did, in the country, lots of local history, wide open spaces, and empty roads to drive on. It's neat that you can tell from the road that this grave was nicely walled. I try to imagine what it looked like back in the day and it must've been magnificent. Especially with the other graves visible. Interesting that the cemetery isn't on record. I wonder if back then they didn't have to legally register a family plot. Wonder if there were guidelines, like if fewer than, I don't know, 10 people were buried on the family property they didn't have to register it. That wouldn't work today. It's illegal to bury just one person on property you own! Imagine trying to explain 10 people on your property..."I'm sorry, officer, but I'm simply starting a family cemetery." LOL! 😆 Sorry! Anyway, you hit the nail on the head 🎯 when you said that graverobbing has gone on since the beginning of time. Egyptian kings and queens weren't safe from it. Just makes me wonder what in the blazes made them want to steal "this" body so long ago. Did they get money for it? What was so important to them? We may never know. Thanks to you and Dan for taking us out there. It was quite enjoyable! Take care!☺️
I have witnessed my grandfathers gravesite having a concrete slab poured over it simply due to threats of his remains being stolen from our family. The remains were to be taken and moved to an unknown location nearer to his second wife’s family in Texas. I suppose there’s many reasons but it doesn’t mean it’s right to do so. If that’s where they wanted to be for eternity then they should remain there.
@@adacox - Here in Los Angeles County, California when human remains are found on someone's property, that someone is brought into the police department pretty fast. Arrested? Probably. Fined? More than likely arrested. I don't "know" the actual "law" around it or the actual "details" of that "law". I'm just saying what I've seen on the news.🤔
@@cindys.9688 … wow. That’s disturbing. We are even allowed to bring home miscarriages… and bury them on our own, where ever we choose. Just one more reason I would never go to CA
Shocking to see and Dan's story of stealing gold teeth - the visual I imagined was ghastly. Hard to fathom. The lowest of the low steals from the dead and vandalizes a cemetery no matter in what form. 😢 I agree with Dan, no such thing as an abandoned cemetery. Stone lined, it amazes me the many different burial methods that you have rum across and featured. The method tells a story in itself - love, care, wealthy, poor, resources, memorial, religion, and traditions - a sign of the times. This cemetery, assume no relation to you, Robert? Enjoyed the history and the awareness. Excellent. 👍👍❤️❤️
Love Dan's stick I recall walking through the old virgin forest in VA and collecting them. Twisted by vines, they're simply good walking sticks. I should return it was memories
I love these videos! It's sad that people do the things that they do. There's a grave outside of Lumpkin, GA that belongs to a civil war veteran's wife that has been desecrated in the past. It truly upsets me. My uncle and me went out to it when I was a teenager back in the 90's. Thanks for a great video.
Thank you, both for what you do! I enjoy history. It is very difficult to imagine someone actually stealing gold teeth from a body. It makes me shudder. I hope the person was caught and punished. Thank you, Dan for sharing that story.
OMG, Castoria!! My mother used to chase me around the house to take it!! It was absolutely disgusting!! But it wasn’t cough medicine, it was a laxative!!
@@AdventuresIntoHistory My mama gave me a dose long before I could read. I liked the taste, so I sneaked back. Next thing, Mama was demanding answers from all 5 kids " Who drank the Castoria?" Nobody admitted to it, but the next day... I didn't have to go break a switch, she felt sorry for me, my tummy hurt ALL Night and most of the day, and my " Hiney " was sore and hurting enough on its own without a switch at all !
Related to the wright family located in oglethorpe and jasper county area , names were leodecia Dicey wright , William and Mary wright. Always intersting too see you guys and your research.
Such an interesting video. I enjoy learning from y'all about how to look at your surroundings and figure out all the clues that tell you how you know you are at a homesite and the different types of burial methods there are in the cemeteries. Also, learning about the plants and how you use those as clues too. Interesting about the chinaberries. Dan knows everything! That stick of his sure has come in handy! I'm sure that the folks who sometimes comment about y'all not being "professionals" will be happy to finally see you with a tool in your hand. But it's such a nice stick, would had to see the tip of it get ruined. Maybe you'll have to show up next time with a more utilitarian one, Robert, so you can really get down to business! That is so sad about the grave robbing and actually knowing that someone would do that. That really just is hard to believe. What kind of heart does a person like that have. They must have been very unhappy while they were living. I hope folks showed his grave more kindness in death than he did to others while he was living!
And where would you sell teeth with gold in them??? I would think it would raise alot of eyebrows, unless the buyer was as couthless as the seller. Maybe the robber would somehow extract the gold from the teeth so no one was the wiser.
Fletchers Castoria is a childrens laxative not a cough remedy. Thanks for a better look at that vault and poking around those other graves. The China Berry Tree info is good to learn. Thanks Dan and Robert
I knew it wasn't for a cough, because I was given Fletcher's Castoria as a child. I don't know what was in it, but it actually tasted good. The color was very dark like molasses, so it may have had some of that in it.
I was born and raised in N.H. The area was fairly rural with old farm houses from the 1700's through the 1950's. My friend and I would saddle up and go through the old grave stitesand look at the dates on the headstones. Some were bare legible from the 1600's. (Unfortunately one of our horses would poop on or by a grave)
Hi Robert and Dan 😊there's nothing sacred 😢there's seems to be a lot of vandalism 😢the dead are supposed to be ( rest in peace) all the best Andrew south wales uk 👌 👍 👏 😀 🇬🇧
Robert & Dan, I really appreciate you guys. I’m am Alabama guy who lives in Cali. I do my exploring via you guys how. Thanks for your channel and your appreciation of history
Re: that fragment of bottle with "Castoria" on it. I remember being given such a medicine when I was little if there was a constipation issue...Fletcher's Castoria was the brand. Love your videos!
@@AdventuresIntoHistory It's so sad to think, that a loved ones, last resting place was disturbed like that. You guys do an amazing service, bringing attention to these old grave yards lost in time.
I accidentally busted up a grave of a British soldier who died in the revolutionary War. Really upset me but I had to look in some weird grotesque morbid way. There was only one upper femur bone the joint part, and a piece of skull about the size of a silver dollar, coins, knife and a gold ring. I immediately reported it to the church and they fixed it up. The guy who was helping me take care of the cemetery landscaping kept the knife, coins and the ring. It's always bothered me that he kept those items and I never reported him. I still feel like I'm a bad person for not reporting him stealing those items from that young British fellow who died in a foreign country centuries ago.
@@nickkillerquartzga3832 it could have been buttons instead of coins, not really sure. The knife was a fixed blade knife but was completely rusted to no end and it had no handle. I dont know what that guy did with the stuff or why he wanted it. Ive seen him multiple times since then but just cant bring myself to ask. The guy used to be a really good friend but we slowly drifted apart after that.
It’s always so sad to see this happen. I can’t imagine what’s wrong with a persons soul to make them desecrate a grave. I’ve seen so many Native American graves done this way. So sad….😔❤️🐝
My family moved on to some timber company land there in Georgia back in the 1800s and was living on it for years before the timber company realized and ended up going to court with a bunch of other families. I guess I come from old timey squatters...😂😂😂😂
My grandfather was a gravedigger and his father before him. My grandpa said that in the late 1800s my great grandpa would place grave bombs in the casket burning burial of high-profile individuals if ordered by the family to prevent grave robbing
@@AdventuresIntoHistory in fact some of the graves that you have stumbled across that appear to have been dug up very well may have exploded during a grave robbery and created a crater
Any way to tell how long ago this grave was disturbed? Okay, you just said it was a long time ago. Burying or destroying the gravestone would keep the casual observer from realizing something was amiss.
I could learn so much from that man, bless him and all his knowledge I had a walking stick like that when i lived in the woods in middle Tennessee before the flood, the little tree had a nasty vine wrapped around it and made it look twisted, lost it in the flood of 2021
Dan and Robert, I seriously think that the one " Rock" you found while tapping for more rock walls, was part of an actualy headstone, cause it really didn't look like a regular rock, it was too flat and in an angle that would not be natural for just a rock..The John Wright Cemetery in Talbot County Georgia..
Robert, are you shopping vintage or finding those cool patterned shirts in a store? My papaw always sported cool cotton shirts like that in the summer and it makes me nostalgic for seeing him in his garden with his sleeves rolled up. ❤
Been a while for me to venture back, very sad but interesting video and good to see Dan all the history and knowledge within is brain. one could sit and listen as he shares it. Thanks guys!
Find a grave says there are 19 interments, then 43 in the slave section. If I'm looking at the right John Wright Cemetery. No pictures of any of the graves tho.
I have been in the woods in Burke County, Georgia and come across a grave that was a hole in the ground. No markers or anything else. I was way back in the woods. There was one other marker a good ways away from the hole that had a Angel monument on it. The cities and counties do not keep up them. A lot of these cemeteries are on private property.
That's really a sad thing that Dan told story of I couldn't imagine what it would be like to find one of my families Graves disturb by robbers. 😊 bless you both
Soooo sad 😔 what kind of people do grave robbing 🤷♀️ I am “70” years old never heard of such a thing 😢. I agree with Dan no such thing as an abandoned cemetery or grave. 😢😢
I have a china berry tree in my yard and live in a house originally built in the late 1800s. I just knew them as toxic, I had no idea they used them to preserve foods, how interesting!
Oops, castoria is a laxative.---Thinking about chinaberries that have to be removed & not consumed, I was thinking the same about adding a bay leaf to spaghetti sauce, cannot be consumed.---Robert, how far away is that location from you? Do you itch to get back there again to see if you can uncover anything else?
Thank you! You are correct, I was trying to say laxative but the memory of tasting that AND Cherocol and Creomulsion all came flooding back from my childhood! -Dan
It's a shame that the logging company, with supervision, couldn't clean up the cemetery while they had some equipment at the site. Just leaf and dead tree removal would make it so much easier for someone to restore the cemetery. It would be beautiful with all the stone visible again. Thank you for showing us around.
Dan is a wealth of knowledge n Robert you’re learning from one of the best. Quite an interesting video. I tried to visual those graves with the wall around them. They had to be a wonderful sight to see. A shame to see how grave robbers would take whatever they thought was valuable to gold teeth to possibly jewelry. So sad, so sad. ♥️♥️😊👍👍👍🌟
Sad to be a witness to this. Desecrating graves is such a shame. Cemeteries have often been completely lost due to the desires of others. In at least one of my family members cemeteries was covered over with a barn and cow pasture. No signs visible. Grave markers gone. This is a place where alnost my entire lineage is wiped out from gggg-grandparents on down to aunts, uncles, cousins, etc. are gone. No eay to visit, add flowers, nothing. Thanks for sharing.
Robert and Dan, This has been going on forever, but in "modern" times It would take a really sick, small mind to desecrate. This is not ancient but Archaeologists generally, no matter how old the grave, show respect for the bones they find Mr. Dan, What kind of person robs graves???? Cheers, Rik Spector
Ah...Mrs Winslows Soothing Syrup a/k/a one of he baby killer syrups that were used back during early americana. That would make for an interesting video, Robert. You need to do a video on this syrup and maybe some others that were household items back in the mid 1800's to the early 1900's. This was a cool old cemetery but sad with regard to the grave that was dug up. Someone looking for jewelry and/or gold teeth possibly? Whatever their reason, it was not a valid one. I hope that whoever was buried there returns from time to time and disturbs the peace of the person or people who did that.
Hi Guys. Just found you. Very interesting and sad about the grave robbing. This must be in Georgia. That red clay and small trees makes me think that anyway. I'm in Indiana. We have some cemeteries in the Hoosier National forest that are old and look like they have been robbed. Sadly. That's awful someone would rob gold teeth. Geesh you have to be desperate.
Robert when you are doing records research be sure to go to...1. the nearest county seat (even if not "the" said county). 2. "The" original county way beck when. 3. The most resent county. I have located pertinent records over 100 miles from the expected county seat.
I find grave robbing/desecration..deeply disturbing...what type of individual could do such a heinous act? Very sad indeed. I appreciate what y'all do..
Doesn't Cecil have a steel probe? It's time to get one of those, and just keep it in your vehicle. As far as info on that cemetery, what about your own genealogy? You might find it by going that route. Maybe? Well that was fun. I'm glad you brought Dan out there for a followup video.
Question: when you say grave robbers, I’m sure they would go after jewelry etc, I know it sounds morbid, did they take the bodies? I mean is your ancestor still there deeper or did they take it. Just out of curiosity.
Sometimes medical students and others would take the bodies to study them. Other than that I really don't know why a person would want a body, unless maybe there was some sort of a family fued going on over where a person was going to be buried. ?????
Such a shame to see this! But good to be aware! By the way, Dan said Castoria was actually a laxative, he was thinking of another one at the time.
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Yes, my bad, as much Castoria as my Mother forced upon me as a kid, you’d think I would remember better. But I also had to take Cherocol and Creomulsion for coughs and such, so easy to confuse! -Dan
@danthevictrolaman9830 -Creomulsion is still the only cough syrup that both works for me and doesn't gag me when I take it. I remember giving it to my girls but they don't have the same fond memories of it that I do, lol.
You mentioned Mrs. Winslow. The channel "Northern Mudlarks" in Scotland posted a really interesting video about that!
Dan I feel your pain. My Mom forced that terrible stuff on me too. It leaves an impression on you for sure. Lol 😳 Enjoy you and Robert so much.
@@danthevictrolaman9830 Oh, yes, Dan, I share memories of Fletchers Castoria with you. Well, I won’t SHARE them with you, but I have them also.
Dan is such a wealth of knowledge. Every country area needs a Dan.
Agreed!
Dido, I agree. ♥️😊👍
amazing! i do believe you guys found my family . im Jonathan wright im related to the wrights of wrightsville, dublin, eastman soperton Ga. im related to John b wright, my great grandfather was named Clyd wright who had several sons Olin wright was my mamas father. im also related to Brig Gen Ambrose wright of Ga. so excited to see this Guys! great job
I'm here for the same reason. Paternal line's family name is Wright. They were enslaved in Georgia so I only have written documentation going back to 1870.
I have to consult my genealogy and see if I am related to this line of Wrights. One line is iffy but a big family from Georgia packed up and went to Texas.
@@wandapease-gi8yoI enjoy Robert and Dan's videos. I went to school with some Wrights in Kountze Texas and they also lived a few miles from my family.
Some Wrights from Georgia settled here in Comanche county Texas. It's where I grew up and when I retired moved back to. Another interesting fact is John Wesley Hardin and his family are from Comanche. The evening, Sherriff Webb of Brown County was killed by Hardin, it happened in Jack Wrights Saloon here in Comanche Texas
Like I said regardless of the dark or the light of history in the United States of America this is awesome that this man was able to see through the other two men that found his family's grave site. And this is all the reason why we need to do this as a country and save this information regardless of the HISTORY. And for the next couple hundreds of years of generation after us and they dig whatever is left and say what's going on here we don't have any information everything was swept under the rug even if it was good or bad so what are we looking at knowing this is American history know we need to know this now and we need to is Now! 🇺🇲
Dan and Robert are a real treasure!
Agreed.
You & Dan are terrific together!!
Disrupting that grave was very disrespectful to the person buried there. I guess some people just arent raised right.
When Dan was describing at the beginning how he knew it was an old homestead with all the different plants and trees around the house all I could think of was the Walton's house in the TV show. It would have been so amazing to live back in those days in such a simple way. It's a shame so much of that lifestyle is gone. Our lives have changed so much.
Lots of tender loving care went into making that grave. Like Dan, I thought it was brick work until he noted otherwise. I wonder if it was family/friends who made it, or "professionals".🤔
I really enjoy how you discover old homesites! You know what markers to look for. Thankfully those markers are still there and identifiable.
I wish I would've grown up around there when I was a kid. I'da had a blast! We lived across from fields (in Oregon) and I liked to explore as best as I could. I played in the irrigation ditch next to our house - when it was empty and dry, of course. Great memories!
Then we moved to the suburbs in California. And here I've stayed.😕 Your daughter is so fortunate to get to grow up like her dad did, in the country, lots of local history, wide open spaces, and empty roads to drive on.
It's neat that you can tell from the road that this grave was nicely walled. I try to imagine what it looked like back in the day and it must've been magnificent. Especially with the other graves visible.
Interesting that the cemetery isn't on record. I wonder if back then they didn't have to legally register a family plot. Wonder if there were guidelines, like if fewer than, I don't know, 10 people were buried on the family property they didn't have to register it.
That wouldn't work today. It's illegal to bury just one person on property you own! Imagine trying to explain 10 people on your property..."I'm sorry, officer, but I'm simply starting a family cemetery." LOL! 😆
Sorry! Anyway, you hit the nail on the head 🎯 when you said that graverobbing has gone on since the beginning of time. Egyptian kings and queens weren't safe from it. Just makes me wonder what in the blazes made them want to steal "this" body so long ago. Did they get money for it? What was so important to them? We may never know.
Thanks to you and Dan for taking us out there. It was quite enjoyable! Take care!☺️
Use to learn stuff from them. We're taken to a doctor. At least some we're, think.
Illegal? Maybe where you are at. But not in my state. We can be buried pretty much anywhere… Maybe we have very lax laws
I have witnessed my grandfathers gravesite having a concrete slab poured over it simply due to threats of his remains being stolen from our family. The remains were to be taken and moved to an unknown location nearer to his second wife’s family in Texas. I suppose there’s many reasons but it doesn’t mean it’s right to do so. If that’s where they wanted to be for eternity then they should remain there.
@@adacox - Here in Los Angeles County, California when human remains are found on someone's property, that someone is brought into the police department pretty fast. Arrested? Probably. Fined? More than likely arrested. I don't "know" the actual "law" around it or the actual "details" of that "law". I'm just saying what I've seen on the news.🤔
@@cindys.9688 … wow. That’s disturbing. We are even allowed to bring home miscarriages… and bury them on our own, where ever we choose.
Just one more reason I would never go to CA
Shocking to see and Dan's story of stealing gold teeth - the visual I imagined was ghastly. Hard to fathom. The lowest of the low steals from the dead and vandalizes a cemetery no matter in what form. 😢 I agree with Dan, no such thing as an abandoned cemetery. Stone lined, it amazes me the many different burial methods that you have rum across and featured. The method tells a story in itself - love, care, wealthy, poor, resources, memorial, religion, and traditions - a sign of the times. This cemetery, assume no relation to you, Robert? Enjoyed the history and the awareness. Excellent.
👍👍❤️❤️
I honestly don’t know.
So sad to see this! Cemeteries should have a special memorial laws put on them to keep them kept up and sacred!
I stopped in and bought a t shirt today Robert. You certainly are in a pretty part of the state.
Love Dan's stick I recall walking through the old virgin forest in VA and collecting them. Twisted by vines, they're simply good walking sticks. I should return it was memories
I really enjoy hearing and seeing about these places. They sure do make history come alive. Thank you, Robert and Dan.
Dan makes your videos so interesting. I love when he says I really don't know much, then goes into amazing historical detail. Thank you for posting.
Thanks guys, love these kind of videos.
It’s a pity that the people buried there have no markers and are now
lost completely to time. Thank you.
I love these videos! It's sad that people do the things that they do. There's a grave outside of Lumpkin, GA that belongs to a civil war veteran's wife that has been desecrated in the past. It truly upsets me. My uncle and me went out to it when I was a teenager back in the 90's. Thanks for a great video.
Thank you, both for what you do! I enjoy history. It is very difficult to imagine someone actually stealing gold teeth from a body. It makes me shudder. I hope the person was caught and punished. Thank you, Dan for sharing that story.
Bravo on the preservation to the sun glasses.! Outstanding patch job!!
Thanks. I lost them. Guess they weren’t my lucky pair after all 🤨🤨🤨🤨
OMG, Castoria!! My mother used to chase me around the house to take it!! It was absolutely disgusting!! But it wasn’t cough medicine, it was a laxative!!
Yeah! Dan corrected himself on that later and said he was thinking of another that started with a C.
@@AdventuresIntoHistory My mama gave me a dose long before I could read. I liked the taste, so I sneaked back. Next thing, Mama was demanding answers from all 5 kids " Who drank the Castoria?" Nobody admitted to it, but the next day... I didn't have to go break a switch, she felt sorry for me, my tummy hurt ALL Night and most of the day, and my " Hiney " was sore and hurting enough on its own without a switch at all !
@@AdventuresIntoHistory the cough syrup was Creomulsion, it looked, smelled and tasted just exactly like liquid tar !
Fletcher's Castoria.
He was probably thinking of Castor oil. It would turn your innards into a straight pipe @@AdventuresIntoHistory
I will never understand Grave Robbing. Thank you for all the work that you do in locating these.
Related to the wright family located in oglethorpe and jasper county area , names were leodecia Dicey wright , William and Mary wright. Always intersting too see you guys and your research.
Check that jar lid for glow with the black light! Awww you put it back down. Some glow in black light like uranium glass.
Such an interesting video. I enjoy learning from y'all about how to look at your surroundings and figure out all the clues that tell you how you know you are at a homesite and the different types of burial methods there are in the cemeteries. Also, learning about the plants and how you use those as clues too. Interesting about the chinaberries. Dan knows everything! That stick of his sure has come in handy! I'm sure that the folks who sometimes comment about y'all not being "professionals" will be happy to finally see you with a tool in your hand. But it's such a nice stick, would had to see the tip of it get ruined. Maybe you'll have to show up next time with a more utilitarian one, Robert, so you can really get down to business! That is so sad about the grave robbing and actually knowing that someone would do that. That really just is hard to believe. What kind of heart does a person like that have. They must have been very unhappy while they were living. I hope folks showed his grave more kindness in death than he did to others while he was living!
And where would you sell teeth with gold in them??? I would think it would raise alot of eyebrows, unless the buyer was as couthless as the seller. Maybe the robber would somehow extract the gold from the teeth so no one was the wiser.
Wow! So sad it's been lost in time and the people with it.
Love that walking stick 🔥🔥🔥
Fletchers Castoria is a childrens laxative not a cough remedy.
Thanks for a better look at that vault and poking around those other graves.
The China Berry Tree info is good to learn. Thanks Dan and Robert
I knew it wasn't for a cough, because I was given Fletcher's Castoria as a child. I don't know what was in it, but it actually tasted good. The color was very dark like molasses, so it may have had some of that in it.
@maryr7800 yes! I think it had prunes in it. Prunes will get your gears moving, so to speak. I liked the taste too.
Love your videos and enjoy watching them Robert and Dan and Bringing out past history
What a shame! Thank you for saving the history of the south.
Dan and Robert the both of you are passionate at what you do. I can't wait to watch more videos
I was born and raised in N.H. The area was fairly rural with old farm houses from the 1700's through the 1950's. My friend and I would saddle up and go through the old grave stitesand look at the dates on the headstones. Some were bare legible from the 1600's. (Unfortunately one of our horses would poop on or by a grave)
Sorry for my typos!
This makes my heart sad, Love Mr Dan such a wealth of information!
Family history is important
Wow! Such admiration for the work y’all do! Thank you for taking us along.
Hi Robert and Dan 😊there's nothing sacred 😢there's seems to be a lot of vandalism 😢the dead are supposed to be ( rest in peace) all the best Andrew south wales uk 👌 👍 👏 😀 🇬🇧
Robert & Dan, I really appreciate you guys. I’m am Alabama guy who lives in Cali. I do my exploring via you guys how. Thanks for your channel and your appreciation of history
The thought of digging up a grave gives me the chills, reckon they would be haunting whoever it was for sure!
Really enjoy your videos! Thank you for all your hard work and for sharing with us♡♡♡
Shame on whoever did this. Total disrespect.
This applies to the graves, and to the land.
I love Dan's hand carved hiking stick!
A leaf blower and a rake could turn up interesting things. Best a plastic rake to prevent scratching tombstones.
How demented does one have to be to rob a graveyard? You need to ask yourself, how did you get to such a low level of humanity?
Right
I agree I’m throwed off but not even like that eewww
Greed and lucrative black market for profit it's a very serious crime 😔
Yes just think of all the tombs they have desecrated in Egypt. It's disgusting.
Experts say it's in the best interest of "archeology and cultural antiquity", BS
Aloha 🌺 Robert & Dan! So sad to see the destruction. Thank you. 🌺🥰
Grave robbing has gone on since the pharos, but this still makes me boiling mad, let the dead rest in peace.
Re: that fragment of bottle with "Castoria" on it. I remember being given such a medicine when I was little if there was a constipation issue...Fletcher's Castoria was the brand.
Love your videos!
Yup! Dan said later that he was thinking of another one that he had to take, along with that one - as a kid - and it was actually a laxative
Do you think, anyone will ever fix it up? Thank-you for taking us with you. Kate from OZ.
I honestly do not know.
@@AdventuresIntoHistory It's so sad to think, that a loved ones, last resting place was disturbed like that. You guys do an amazing service, bringing attention to these old grave yards lost in time.
Very cool walking stick
Makes me want to cry. Sad😢
I accidentally busted up a grave of a British soldier who died in the revolutionary War. Really upset me but I had to look in some weird grotesque morbid way. There was only one upper femur bone the joint part, and a piece of skull about the size of a silver dollar, coins, knife and a gold ring. I immediately reported it to the church and they fixed it up. The guy who was helping me take care of the cemetery landscaping kept the knife, coins and the ring. It's always bothered me that he kept those items and I never reported him. I still feel like I'm a bad person for not reporting him stealing those items from that young British fellow who died in a foreign country centuries ago.
Damn that’s a wild story. I think that would stick with me also. But can’t do anything about it now. Shit happens
I'm sure that same scenario happens quite a bit remains unreported
Kurt just ask for forgiveness you're not responsible for the actions of another there will be consequences that he will answer for not you
@@nickkillerquartzga3832 it could have been buttons instead of coins, not really sure. The knife was a fixed blade knife but was completely rusted to no end and it had no handle. I dont know what that guy did with the stuff or why he wanted it. Ive seen him multiple times since then but just cant bring myself to ask. The guy used to be a really good friend but we slowly drifted apart after that.
It’s always so sad to see this happen. I can’t imagine what’s wrong with a persons soul to make them desecrate a grave. I’ve seen so many Native American graves done this way. So sad….😔❤️🐝
I believe one of my Cook ancestors married into this John Wright family. Very sad to see the old cemetery in disrepair. Thanks for sharing this video.
Never thought of equating surrounding flora with a previous homestead. Very interesting!
Thanks!
Thank YOU!
My family moved on to some timber company land there in Georgia back in the 1800s and was living on it for years before the timber company realized and ended up going to court with a bunch of other families. I guess I come from old timey squatters...😂😂😂😂
My grandfather was a gravedigger and his father before him. My grandpa said that in the late 1800s my great grandpa would place grave bombs in the casket burning burial of high-profile individuals if ordered by the family to prevent grave robbing
Wow
@@AdventuresIntoHistory in fact some of the graves that you have stumbled across that appear to have been dug up very well may have exploded during a grave robbery and created a crater
Very interesting!
Robert needs his own fancy stick too, He held on to that stick for a long time, didn't he?
😅
Yes!😂
Any way to tell how long ago this grave was disturbed? Okay, you just said it was a long time ago. Burying or destroying the gravestone would keep the casual observer from realizing something was amiss.
Hello and good to see you both again and what a find it's such a shame that people disturb the people at rest. 😢thanks for sharing and take care 😊
I could learn so much from that man, bless him and all his knowledge
I had a walking stick like that when i lived in the woods in middle Tennessee before the flood, the little tree had a nasty vine wrapped around it and made it look twisted, lost it in the flood of 2021
You two are awesome!!! Thank you Dan for telling us that grave robbing is a real and abominable thing. Keep on doing what you are doing!
Castoria, I believe, was used as a laxative for children and sometimes adults. I had it as a child.
Dan and Robert, I seriously think that the one " Rock" you found while tapping for more rock walls, was part of an actualy headstone, cause it really didn't look like a regular rock, it was too flat and in an angle that would not be natural for just a rock..The John Wright Cemetery in Talbot County Georgia..
Robert, are you shopping vintage or finding those cool patterned shirts in a store? My papaw always sported cool cotton shirts like that in the summer and it makes me nostalgic for seeing him in his garden with his sleeves rolled up. ❤
Castoria is a children's laxative. Ask me how I know! I still remember my mom coming at me with a spoon full of that stuff. BLECH!! 😆
My Mama used to give it to us too and yes it was a laxative
Been a while for me to venture back, very sad but interesting video and good to see Dan all the history and knowledge within is brain. one could sit and listen as he shares it. Thanks guys!
Find a grave says there are 19 interments, then 43 in the slave section. If I'm looking at the right John Wright Cemetery. No pictures of any of the graves tho.
I’m not sure that would be the same one. Can you send a link though? If RUclips will let it
Can you put a sign up. Put the name of the cemetery there. Maybe put orange caution tape around it. ???
I love your videos I wish I could trace my family's burial spots I've just started getting really interested in tracing my family line
This is very interesting and so good that you were able to find these forgotten graves. History hidden in the woods.
Man I love Dans walking stick. Where did he find it?
He said someone drove from Kentucky to Georgia to bring it to him.
That is another amazing find of a cemetery long forgotten
I have been in the woods in Burke County, Georgia and come across a grave that was a hole in the ground. No markers or anything else. I was way back in the woods. There was one other marker a good ways away from the hole that had a Angel monument on it. The cities and counties do not keep up them. A lot of these cemeteries are on private property.
That's really a sad thing that Dan told story of I couldn't imagine what it would be like to find one of my families Graves disturb by robbers. 😊 bless you both
That is so disturbing to see so much disrespect. It is so very sad.
Love your adventures. Dan should be designated a National Historic person. Wow, he is amazing!
I'm still looking for a snake stick. I haven't found one, yet. I might have to have one made.
What do you think about a crop field planted on top of an old cemetery? Very sad.
Soooo sad 😔 what kind of people do grave robbing 🤷♀️ I am “70” years old never heard of such a thing 😢. I agree with Dan no such thing as an abandoned cemetery or grave. 😢😢
Enjoyed.!!!!!!!
I have a china berry tree in my yard and live in a house originally built in the late 1800s. I just knew them as toxic, I had no idea they used them to preserve foods, how interesting!
Oops, castoria is a laxative.---Thinking about chinaberries that have to be removed & not consumed, I was thinking the same about adding a bay leaf to spaghetti sauce, cannot be consumed.---Robert, how far away is that location from you? Do you itch to get back there again to see if you can uncover anything else?
Thank you! You are correct, I was trying to say laxative but the memory of tasting that AND Cherocol and Creomulsion all came flooding back from my childhood! -Dan
@@danthevictrolaman9830 Yep, as I suspected!
It's a shame that the logging company, with supervision, couldn't clean up the cemetery while they had some equipment at the site. Just leaf and dead tree removal would make it so much easier for someone to restore the cemetery. It would be beautiful with all the stone visible again. Thank you for showing us around.
Dan is a wealth of knowledge n Robert you’re learning from one of the best.
Quite an interesting video. I tried to visual
those graves with the wall around them. They had to be a wonderful sight to see. A shame to see how grave robbers would take whatever they thought was valuable to gold teeth to possibly jewelry. So sad, so sad.
♥️♥️😊👍👍👍🌟
Thank you for telling me about Chinaberry, I have a necklace handed down through family and I never knew what it was made with.👍
Sad to be a witness to this. Desecrating graves is such a shame. Cemeteries have often been completely lost due to the desires of others. In at least one of my family members cemeteries was covered over with a barn and cow pasture. No signs visible. Grave markers gone. This is a place where alnost my entire lineage is wiped out from gggg-grandparents on down to aunts, uncles, cousins, etc. are gone. No eay to visit, add flowers, nothing. Thanks for sharing.
What a shame and cruel....
Dan's "stick" is called a shillelagh!
You guys do great work!
Good find
A revisit this time with Dan. It is a shame to think that your initial suspicion of a grave robbery is probably correct.
You should bring a rake and a trowel to avoid the snakes. You both did a great job!
Robert and Dan,
This has been going on forever, but in "modern" times It would
take a really sick, small mind to desecrate.
This is not ancient but Archaeologists generally, no matter how old the grave, show respect
for the bones they find
Mr. Dan,
What kind of person robs graves????
Cheers,
Rik Spector
Ah...Mrs Winslows Soothing Syrup a/k/a one of he baby killer syrups that were used back during early americana. That would make for an interesting video, Robert. You need to do a video on this syrup and maybe some others that were household items back in the mid 1800's to the early 1900's. This was a cool old cemetery but sad with regard to the grave that was dug up. Someone looking for jewelry and/or gold teeth possibly? Whatever their reason, it was not a valid one. I hope that whoever was buried there returns from time to time and disturbs the peace of the person or people who did that.
Hi Guys.
Just found you. Very interesting and sad about the grave robbing.
This must be in Georgia. That red clay and small trees makes me think that anyway. I'm in Indiana. We have some cemeteries in the Hoosier National forest that are old and look like they have been robbed. Sadly.
That's awful someone would rob gold teeth. Geesh you have to be desperate.
Good looking walking stick Dan. Fits you well.
Robert when you are doing records research be sure to go to...1. the nearest county seat (even if not "the" said county). 2. "The" original county way beck when. 3. The most resent county. I have located pertinent records over 100 miles from the expected county seat.
I find grave robbing/desecration..deeply disturbing...what type of individual could do such a heinous act? Very sad indeed. I appreciate what y'all do..
Doesn't Cecil have a steel probe? It's time to get one of those, and just keep it in your vehicle. As far as info on that cemetery, what about your own genealogy? You might find it by going that route. Maybe? Well that was fun. I'm glad you brought Dan out there for a followup video.
Question: when you say grave robbers, I’m sure they would go after jewelry etc, I know it sounds morbid, did they take the bodies? I mean is your ancestor still there deeper or did they take it. Just out of curiosity.
Sometimes medical students and others would take the bodies to study them. Other than that I really don't know why a person would want a body, unless maybe there was some sort of a family fued going on over where a person was going to be buried. ?????
Robbing the dead and buried. Something sick and demented about this behavior. Unholy desecration.!!
I am so sad for you Robert! This has to be very disturbing to you.😢
Incredible video. Glad the gods told me to watch the previous video last night. Hope the dolt who desegregated that grave got his karma in life