I won't get into the whole family,but my family came from Arkansas went by wagon to Oklahoma.I have an oil lamp and teapot both on perfect condition from the trip.I also have a small book written by a great great great grandma,who went to look for her laddie boy during the war of north and south.She was amazing
Note that Sergeant F. M. Moore has a UNION Army gravestone. 2nd Regiment Arkansas Volunteer Cavalry Regiment. Here is more about it. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd_Arkansas_Cavalry_Regiment_(Union)
Thanks for the video. Hope maybe someone around there can do some regular mowing and maintenance to honor these resting souls. ❤ If ya'll are ever in Garland County, I am looking for some grave markers with the last name of Bain. Moved out there from Tennessee in the late 1800's. Thank you. God bless!!
When I was little the Boy Scouts used to work in the town cemetery to keep it nice. Now the town budget pays to have it done. The two large cemeteries one Catholic owned by theChurch and one for everyone owned by a private company both maintain the graves for a fee from the sale of the plots.
Well, Thomas seems like he was a bit promiscuous! 😂 If he'd married the sisters, it would have said so. RIP Sellers Brothers💙Its sad that someday there will be buildings and such on all these old cemeteries. Thank y'all for all y'alls time and work to tell these stories. ☺
Tried to find out more about Thomas Kidd and all I could find was that he had 4 children, all 4 were born in Kentucky. BUT what was more interesting was the fact that when I looked up all 5 names, no mention of Nancy or her sisters!
Reminds me of my father and me!!! We would go to old cemeteries alot. We would look at the years and wonder...how they got where they were, how hard it was back them,etc. Now....my father is one of those graves. I know it might sound horrible... But I miss those times we had.❤
11:50 1870-1871 i think it was either thyphoid or yellow fever OUTBREAK across the south. I found a plot with a woman who survied the civil war, but in 1871 her and five of her kids died. I researched and found out there was a big epidemic across the south at that time.
Did you notice that the stones that are laying flat have letters that are not as worn down. I’m guessing cause the upright ones get rain washing down the front over so much time that it wears down the writing.
I’m so but if we don’t walk on the graves we can’t give the viewers a good shot of the graves , some people on the other side of the country have seen their loved ones grave for the first time watching our videos .
This sounds like my Dads Father. Later in my Dad's life after he got out of the Army, he learned that he had numerous half brothers and sisters. He made contact with all of those he was made aware of before he passed away.
Hi! I am new to your wonderful site but, please, put the light on the opposite side of stone so it can be seen easier and please, keep it still, it moves so I can’t read! You two are fun with what you are doing! I will be starting very soon! Weather is reaching Spring fast!
Perhapse the sisters that Thomas "kidd" fathered the children with were of Native American descent. It was common in some communities for the husband to, if asked by the wife to recieve her sisters for procreation. Keep in mind in most Native American communities the "house" was the property of the woman and under her rule. Should he fail to provide or follow her instructions he would be replaced.
This is a very interesting old cemetery. I'm glad the two little boys could be buried together here before the family moved on. How hard to leave them behind, knowing you will never get to return to their graves. My maternal grandparents were 1st cousins, and they were both born and raised in North Missouri. Mom always said they grew up always being with each others families and were comfortable around each other. It did happen a lot a few generations back when families were close and the cousins were always around each other. So, it wasn't just in Arkansas, lol! By the way, it's nice to see your faces!
Born in @777? Here in the great blue atate of Maryland we have people born in the 1630's! Massachusetts have even older graves! 🇩🇪🇨🇭🇺🇲🌊♀️🌊⚓⛵⚓🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊
Wow! That uncle was evil. Poor Frank Moore. I’m sure that the pool of people who were of marriageable age was pretty small back then. The tent graves are awesome too! I wonder if they did that for aesthetic reasons or if there was another reason. Sarah Meadors tent grave, but I don’t see any wording. The Sellers boys stones almost look like they have been re-etched at some point. Thanks for sharing this video. I will say a prayer for the folks buried there. ❤Brenda P❤
Why are some of the old white gravestones still clean and some are absolutely covered with moss and lichens? When they are only feet apart? Different materials are resistant?❤❤❤❤
I lived in Prairie Grove AR for a couple years...I love the "telling on you" stone! At least if someone does a DNA hunt they'll find a clue! And marrying cousins appears sorta normal in that part of the world. 😮
Lots of sisters married there sisters ex. Sometimes after they died. My great grandmother married her first husband, divorced and several years later her sister married him.
I taught my child about the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic by stopping at old country cemetaries on trips. There are whole families buried within days or a few of weeks of each other in every cemetary we stopped at in Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri.
Huh. I wonder if those Moores were an offshoot of my people? According to Family Search Mom's Mom had Moores in the tree in the 1700-early 1800s. Though most of those Moores are out of Virginia. Anyway, thanks for the interesting video! I'm homebound so these type of videos are the only way I can get my "let's look at neat, old graves!" fix. Lol Peace, Grooviness, and safe travels!
I went to Find a Grave to look up Bolton Cemetery but it wasn't there. My 6th great grandfather is buried somewhere around Alma so I wanted to see if he is in that cemetery. Anyway I am enjoying your channel. This was the first time I had seen you so I subscribed.
My mom’s paternal side was originally from Ireland, but sailed to Newfoundland for ship building before 1800. I guess it was pretty isolated there over 200 years ago, so cousins married cousins.
I love seeing areas of Arkansas that I am familiar with. I currently live in So California and did live in Van Buren for a year in 2005 until my mom passed, and then my husband wanted to come back to California 😕. We have family and friends there, and I desperately want to move back. Someday 🙏. I’d love to see some in fort smith and VB. I have relatives buried in other cities there, I’ll have to look them up. There were some graves that looked like big piles of rocks! I’m not sure what that is about…? Would you be interested in going there and checking it out? I’ll find which cemetery it was
Wow thats an old cemetery 1777... wonder where they came from originally! My grandma was born 1903 in Del Rio, Tennessee abd sone of her older family moved west .
@@barbaraschleiff3774 There is room for Improvement but I saw everything clearly and no one else in the comments here complained about the camera being 'so far out of focus.' I had no problems with this video. It was an interesting video. Some people just love to complain.
I just stumbled across your channel and it’s very interesting! I live in Poteau, Oklahoma, there is a very old cemetery in Fanshawe Oklahoma, called Maxi cemetery. It would be worth a trip!
If you think 1777 is an early date (it’s not really because it’s the beginning of the 19th century) take a trip to Charleston, SC or Savannah, GA. You’ll see dates of birth into mid and early 1600’s.
In my family two unrelated ancestors got married and then a relative from each one met at the wedding and later married each other. I guess they were “cousins” but weren’t otherwise related.
I do genealogy research for my family. My mother’s family was in Arkansas. I have at least two men who married sisters after the first sister died. They were in Conway County in the 1850s. Most families had numerous children. In some cases, only half or less made it to adulthood. In others, all lived to have their own children. There were not a lot of different families in the area, so the options were few. If one sister had several children when her husband died, and a widower of another sister who died, there were a lot children, so when they married, that was some huge families. Many members of my family are buried at the Woolverton Mountain Cemetery in Conway County.
Okay.. as a researcher, I just finished going down a rabbit hole with the Thomas Kidd / Gregory family… it doesn’t look as though Thomas married any of the Gregory sisters except Nancy..& he seems to have had children with her sisters. 1860 Census: (living in the same house) Thomas Kidd (48), Nancy (30), Polly (8), Eliza T. (6), Pamela (6), Elizabeth (5), George W. (4), John (1), Martha Gregory (20), William Gregory (4). 1870 Census: Thomas Kidd, N.A., M.J., Permelia (Pamela on previous census), Louisa (Eliza on previous census), Elizabeth, G.W., Jerry (John on previous census), Hanna. Immediately next door: Martha Gregory, William (13), Shelby (8), Angeline (5), B.A. (unable to read age). Immediately next door to Martha: Malinda Stephens (21), John (9? - may say 3), Riley (2) Thomas is the only one listed as being able to read and write on this census. 1 June 1875 Thomas S Kidd registered for his 40 acres of land in Crawford County, Arkansas. 1880 census: J.M. Kidd (21 - head), Sarah J. (25 - wife), Hannah (17 - sister), John F. (7 - brother), Julian (6 - nephew), Nancy Gregory (45 - mother) Nancy is listed as being Divorced on the 1880 census & has reverted to her maiden name. Household next to them is just a male named Stevens, age 25. Next Household: Martha Gregory (38 - claiming to be a widow), Shelvine (17), Angeline (14), Betty Ann (12), Mary Ann (1) Next Household: Malinda Gregory (40 - claiming to be a widow), John (19), Riley (13), Marion (3), Mary A. Masterson (26) Nancy Gregory (age 48), married F.H. Berna (Francis H.) (age 69) in April 1882 (his 1 wife died in January 1882). Francis owned at least 120 acres of land and died in May of 1884. John Gregory (22), Malinda’s son, married Nancey Berna (15), the granddaughter of Francis Berna in September 1883. Martha (Patricia “Pat”) Gregory (age 40) married James Thomas (age 28) in November 1884. Shelvin/Shelby Gregory’s death certificate lists “Tomas Kidd Gregory” as his father & mother as “Patsey Gregory” - which was information provided to the clerk by a friend or family member of the deceased.
@@barbaraschleiff3774 Ill do some asking around. There is someone I retired with that just retired with army National Guard out of Fort Campbell, Kentucky. He used to do the markings of the Revolutionary and Civil War vets. He may know I'll let you know
I have heard that in the “olden days”, if you could survive through the childhood diseases until 4 years old, your life expectancy (barring war or accidents or death from childbirth) would be the Biblical “ 3 score and 10 or 4 score”. The poor children skewed the average life expectancy age in early America.
Have you been to the Wickes Arkansas? That is where my dad’s right leg is buried. He had to have it amputated when he was 5 years old. He lived to be 88 years old. Became a doctor Dr. Gale Seigler D.O. He is buried in Plainview. Texas. I believe his parents, my grandparents , Joe E. ( Joseph Ebenezer) and Lula (Smith maiden) Seigler are buried there as well along with numerous other family members. My grandmother was a twin. Her sister was Bula.i believe her husbands name was Ben. Not sure her married name. My grandparents lived in Mena the majority of their lives.
I love this! I grew up in Van Buren and enjoy hearing the stories. I see a lot of improvements in your videos too! Keep making them, I’ll keep watching. Have fun!!!
if this helps Ibbitson is English (Yorkshire): from the Middle English personal name Ibbot usually a pet form of the female personal name Isabel + -son; Ibbitson
The one without the death date, probably was not buried there. Info may have been put on when wife died so only death date needed to be added. Then for some reason he was buried somewhere else. This happened with my grandmother. I have her spare stone in my yard now. Got it from cemetery.
They may have been mormons. Communities were often isolated in those days as well. There could be very understandable reasons for these odd unions for the harsh living of those days.
I won't get into the whole family,but my family came from Arkansas went by wagon to Oklahoma.I have an oil lamp and teapot both on perfect condition from the trip.I also have a small book written by a great great great grandma,who went to look for her laddie boy during the war of north and south.She was amazing
Wow that’s awesome
Note that Sergeant F. M. Moore has a UNION Army gravestone. 2nd Regiment Arkansas Volunteer Cavalry Regiment. Here is more about it. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2nd_Arkansas_Cavalry_Regiment_(Union)
Thank you for the information
Thanks for the video. Hope maybe someone around there can do some regular mowing and maintenance to honor these resting souls. ❤ If ya'll are ever in Garland County, I am looking for some grave markers with the last name of Bain. Moved out there from Tennessee in the late 1800's. Thank you. God bless!!
Thank you so much and God bless you
When I was little the Boy Scouts used to work in the town cemetery to keep it nice. Now the town budget pays to have it done. The two large cemeteries one Catholic owned by theChurch and one for everyone owned by a private company both maintain the graves for a fee from the sale of the plots.
Well, Thomas seems like he was a bit promiscuous! 😂 If he'd married the sisters, it would have said so. RIP Sellers Brothers💙Its sad that someday there will be buildings and such on all these old cemeteries. Thank y'all for all y'alls time and work to tell these stories. ☺
Thank you so much
That's a nice cemetery. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you
Tried to find out more about Thomas Kidd and all I could find was that he had 4 children, all 4 were born in Kentucky. BUT what was more interesting was the fact that when I looked up all 5 names, no mention of Nancy or her sisters!
Oh wow ! That’s crazy
Reminds me of my father and me!!! We would go to old cemeteries alot. We would look at the years and wonder...how they got where they were, how hard it was back them,etc. Now....my father is one of those graves. I know it might sound horrible... But I miss those times we had.❤
Great memories
11:50 1870-1871 i think it was either thyphoid or yellow fever OUTBREAK across the south. I found a plot with a woman who survied the civil war, but in 1871 her and five of her kids died. I researched and found out there was a big epidemic across the south at that time.
Oh my that would be so heartbreaking
Did you notice that the stones that are laying flat have letters that are not as worn down. I’m guessing cause the upright ones get rain washing down the front over so much time that it wears down the writing.
Interesting
If you are going to go through the cemeteries pay respect and don't walk on the graves.
I’m so but if we don’t walk on the graves we can’t give the viewers a good shot of the graves , some people on the other side of the country have seen their loved ones grave for the first time watching our videos .
This sounds like my Dads Father. Later in my Dad's life after he got out of the Army, he learned that he had numerous half brothers and sisters. He made contact with all of those he was made aware of before he passed away.
Thanks for watching
Hi! I am new to your wonderful site but, please, put the light on the opposite side of stone so it can be seen easier and please, keep it still, it moves so I can’t read! You two are fun with what you are doing! I will be starting very soon! Weather is reaching Spring fast!
Thanks for the tip!
That's what you call "keeping it interesting family."
Yes !!!
Ol Thomas might have been a polygamist especially with that gravestone reading the way it does
Yes
Perhapse the sisters that Thomas "kidd" fathered the children with were of Native American descent. It was common in some communities for the husband to, if asked by the wife to recieve her sisters for procreation. Keep in mind in most Native American communities the "house" was the property of the woman and under her rule. Should he fail to provide or follow her instructions he would be replaced.
Interesting!
Wow thank you ❤❤❤
Thank you !
Probably from Sears Catalog, plates to be able to take out and out back in need of change of corrections?
Maybe so
Thanks for this Arkansas history. !
Thank you for watching
😢🎉
Sounds almost like they are blaming the sisters, to me.
Could be
Those are flag stone
Thanks for the info
There is a lot of empty space between some of the graves. Probably a lot of unmarked graves. Sad.
Probably so
This is a very interesting old cemetery. I'm glad the two little boys could be buried together here before the family moved on. How hard to leave them behind, knowing you will never get to return to their graves. My maternal grandparents were 1st cousins, and they were both born and raised in North Missouri. Mom always said they grew up always being with each others families and were comfortable around each other. It did happen a lot a few generations back when families were close and the cousins were always around each other. So, it wasn't just in Arkansas, lol! By the way, it's nice to see your faces!
Thank you for the kind comment
I have the same thing on my Ancestry DNA the stories are more outrageous then my Soap stories.
We probably all have a little of that in our families.
I think they were Mormons. They are on the Family Search site and the children and wives all overlap one another.
Oh wow . Thank you
My mom & dad are almost 90 they say cousin married cousins it was Who you lived close to.
Born in @777? Here in the great blue atate of Maryland we have people born in the 1630's! Massachusetts have even older graves! 🇩🇪🇨🇭🇺🇲🌊♀️🌊⚓⛵⚓🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊🌊
Oh I would love to visit there
Thank you for watching
Arkansas was Indian territory then . They didn’t mark their graves with tombstones at that time . We did do a video on a beautiful Choctaw cemetery
Wow! That uncle was evil. Poor Frank Moore. I’m sure that the pool of people who were of marriageable age was pretty small back then.
The tent graves are awesome too! I wonder if they did that for aesthetic reasons or if there was another reason. Sarah Meadors tent grave, but I don’t see any wording. The Sellers boys stones almost look like they have been re-etched at some point.
Thanks for sharing this video. I will say a prayer for the folks buried there. ❤Brenda P❤
Thank you so much for your kind comment
They make tent graves to keep wild animals from digging them up back in the 1700 & 1800
Hello I enjoy watching y'all those tent graves the rocks were placed like that in the 1700 & 1800 to keep wild animals from digging them up
Why are some of the old white gravestones still clean and some are absolutely covered with moss and lichens? When they are only feet apart? Different materials are resistant?❤❤❤❤
I know , I guess it’s the different materials. Thank you for watching
I lived in Prairie Grove AR for a couple years...I love the "telling on you" stone! At least if someone does a DNA hunt they'll find a clue! And marrying cousins appears sorta normal in that part of the world. 😮
Yes :(
Yes DNA finds lots of family secrets
Lots of sisters married there sisters ex. Sometimes after they died. My great grandmother married her first husband, divorced and several years later her sister married him.
Yes
Love how you find out back history..im in England but always tune in x keep up the great work x
Thank you for your kind comment
Marrying family makes the holidays easier! 😂
lol yes
I think first to keep animals from the remains 2nd I think it might be to keep grave robbers out.
Yes . Thank you for watching
What month were the deaths? Could it be because the ground was frozen?
Metal markers ars probably zinc
Thank you
That's what they are.
Some call those "zinkers." 👍
Yes thank you
I taught my child about the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic by stopping at old country cemetaries on trips. There are whole families buried within days or a few of weeks of each other in every cemetary we stopped at in Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri.
It’s so sad
If you like old graves and have the chance, check out Burial Hill in Plymouth MA... they have some REALLY old ones
Would love it
Huh. I wonder if those Moores were an offshoot of my people? According to Family Search Mom's Mom had Moores in the tree in the 1700-early 1800s. Though most of those Moores are out of Virginia. Anyway, thanks for the interesting video! I'm homebound so these type of videos are the only way I can get my "let's look at neat, old graves!" fix. Lol Peace, Grooviness, and safe travels!
Thanks for watching
I went to Find a Grave to look up Bolton Cemetery but it wasn't there. My 6th great grandfather is buried somewhere around Alma so I wanted to see if he is in that cemetery. Anyway I am enjoying your channel. This was the first time I had seen you so I subscribed.
Bolton Cemetery is actually in Dean Springs, Crawford County, Arkansas. If that helps you.. it is on FindAGrave.
Thank you so much
My father was born in Alma, AR! I wonder if we have family buried there!😊
Go to find a grave and check
My mom’s paternal side was originally from Ireland, but sailed to Newfoundland for ship building before 1800. I guess it was pretty isolated there over 200 years ago, so cousins married cousins.
Yes
Heeheee, looks like we've got some trees that aren't forked. Love your videos.❤🙏
Thank you for watching
What cemetery is this in Arkansas please let me kn❤
Bolton
My husband is related to the Kidd's.
Oh wow , the Kidds from Alma Ar ?
My parents tombstone has mine and my 9 siblings names on the back of the stone
That’s nice
BTW - Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip were cousins too.😮
Thanks for watching
I can't get enough of your videos!
You don’t know how much the kind comments mean to me. Thank you
I love seeing areas of Arkansas that I am familiar with. I currently live in So California and did live in Van Buren for a year in 2005 until my mom passed, and then my husband wanted to come back to California 😕. We have family and friends there, and I desperately want to move back. Someday 🙏. I’d love to see some in fort smith and VB. I have relatives buried in other cities there, I’ll have to look them up. There were some graves that looked like big piles of rocks! I’m not sure what that is about…? Would you be interested in going there and checking it out? I’ll find which cemetery it was
Yes ! What are the cemeteries and names . I will make a special video . I’m from Van Buren , my husband grew up in Ftsm
Yes
@@barbaraschleiff3774 I believe it was Tyro cemetery in Dumas. It was towards the back. Everything I search, says it’s an Indian grave 🤔
I believe some pre civil war burials look like a pile of rocks or stones
Looks like this was added by a dependent as they don't know death date
Maybe so
He died in 1881 and had ten children with at least three women.
My last name maiden was moore . And meadows .😅
Thanks for watching
Moores and meadows in Bedford Indiana ❤
I have seen tent graves that had a metal post from end to end to hold the sides it was an esthetic choice
Thank you
Wow thats an old cemetery 1777... wonder where they came from originally! My grandma was born 1903 in Del Rio, Tennessee abd sone of her older family moved west .
Yes . Thanks for watching
It is all the same meadows . Wow moore too .
Delbert meadows my grandpa my dad's last name was moore . Bedford Indiana them name are all over .
It’s a small world
I really like your videos, but your camera is so far out of focus I quit this one
I’m so sorry
@@barbaraschleiff3774 There is room for Improvement but I saw everything clearly and no one else in the comments here complained about the camera being 'so far out of focus.' I had no problems with this video. It was an interesting video. Some people just love to complain.
Thank you for your comment
I just stumbled across your channel and it’s very interesting! I live in Poteau, Oklahoma, there is a very old cemetery in Fanshawe Oklahoma, called Maxi cemetery. It would be worth a trip!
I will check it out
If you think 1777 is an early date (it’s not really because it’s the beginning of the 19th century) take a trip to Charleston, SC or Savannah, GA. You’ll see dates of birth into mid and early 1600’s.
Thanks for watching
In my family two unrelated ancestors got married and then a relative from each one met at the wedding and later married each other. I guess they were “cousins” but weren’t otherwise related.
Thanks for watching
He kept in the family..
Yes :)
I do genealogy research for my family. My mother’s family was in Arkansas. I have at least two men who married sisters after the first sister died. They were in Conway County in the 1850s. Most families had numerous children. In some cases, only half or less made it to adulthood. In others, all lived to have their own children. There were not a lot of different families in the area, so the options were few. If one sister had several children when her husband died, and a widower of another sister who died, there were a lot children, so when they married, that was some huge families. Many members of my family are buried at the Woolverton Mountain Cemetery in Conway County.
Thanks for the info.
Someone wanted Thomas’s sins revealed. Payback, or just in case someone in the future wonders. It’s a good thing .
Thanks for watching
watch out for snakes out in the brush. You both are great. Keep an eye out. I need to remind myself of the same thing.
Thank you! Will do!
Maybe they were Mormons. Sisterwives
I think so
That whole area is still full of Gregorys.
Yes
It's like... Arkansas 😂😂😂😂
The Kidd-Gregory headstone needs to be lifted on one side. Wonder if there are any restoration services where you are? 🤔
I don’t know
Okay.. as a researcher, I just finished going down a rabbit hole with the Thomas Kidd / Gregory family… it doesn’t look as though Thomas married any of the Gregory sisters except Nancy..& he seems to have had children with her sisters.
1860 Census: (living in the same house)
Thomas Kidd (48), Nancy (30), Polly (8), Eliza T. (6), Pamela (6), Elizabeth (5), George W. (4), John (1), Martha Gregory (20), William Gregory (4).
1870 Census:
Thomas Kidd, N.A., M.J., Permelia (Pamela on previous census), Louisa (Eliza on previous census), Elizabeth, G.W., Jerry (John on previous census), Hanna.
Immediately next door:
Martha Gregory, William (13), Shelby (8), Angeline (5), B.A. (unable to read age).
Immediately next door to Martha:
Malinda Stephens (21), John (9? - may say 3), Riley (2)
Thomas is the only one listed as being able to read and write on this census.
1 June 1875 Thomas S Kidd registered for his 40 acres of land in Crawford County, Arkansas.
1880 census:
J.M. Kidd (21 - head), Sarah J. (25 - wife), Hannah (17 - sister), John F. (7 - brother), Julian (6 - nephew), Nancy Gregory (45 - mother)
Nancy is listed as being Divorced on the 1880 census & has reverted to her maiden name.
Household next to them is just a male named Stevens, age 25.
Next Household:
Martha Gregory (38 - claiming to be a widow), Shelvine (17), Angeline (14), Betty Ann (12), Mary Ann (1)
Next Household:
Malinda Gregory (40 - claiming to be a widow), John (19), Riley (13), Marion (3), Mary A. Masterson (26)
Nancy Gregory (age 48), married F.H. Berna (Francis H.) (age 69) in April 1882 (his 1 wife died in January 1882).
Francis owned at least 120 acres of land and died in May of 1884.
John Gregory (22), Malinda’s son, married Nancey Berna (15), the granddaughter of Francis Berna in September 1883.
Martha (Patricia “Pat”) Gregory (age 40) married James Thomas (age 28) in November 1884.
Shelvin/Shelby Gregory’s death certificate lists “Tomas Kidd Gregory” as his father & mother as “Patsey Gregory” - which was information provided to the clerk by a friend or family member of the deceased.
Wow !!!!! Thank you for watching
Y’all com bac na here 😂😂😂
Thank you for watching
It might help to get a flashlight with a stronger and bigger beam. Just an idea😊
Yes thanks
Sometimes if a wife died, the husband would marry her sister.
Yes
Thanks for the video and great history lesson!
Thank you
Boring very boring
Great job.
The man that was a Calvary volunteer may be able to receive a formal civil war headstone. Maybe..
Maybe so , not sure how to go about doing that
@@barbaraschleiff3774 Ill do some asking around. There is someone I retired with that just retired with army National Guard out of Fort Campbell, Kentucky. He used to do the markings of the Revolutionary and Civil War vets. He may know
I'll let you know
Awesome thank you
Maybe they was Mormon.
Yes
I have heard that in the “olden days”, if you could survive through the childhood diseases until 4 years old, your life expectancy (barring war or accidents or death from childbirth) would be the Biblical “ 3 score and 10 or 4 score”. The poor children skewed the average life expectancy age in early America.
Yes
Have you been to the Wickes Arkansas? That is where my dad’s right leg is buried. He had to have it amputated when he was 5 years old. He lived to be 88 years old. Became a doctor Dr. Gale Seigler D.O. He is buried in Plainview. Texas. I believe his parents, my grandparents , Joe E. ( Joseph Ebenezer) and Lula (Smith maiden) Seigler are buried there as well along with numerous other family members. My grandmother was a twin. Her sister was Bula.i believe her husbands name was Ben. Not sure her married name. My grandparents lived in Mena the majority of their lives.
No I haven’t . Thanks for watching
He was keeping it in the family
Yes
I love this! I grew up in Van Buren and enjoy hearing the stories. I see a lot of improvements in your videos too! Keep making them, I’ll keep watching. Have fun!!!
Thank you
Marrying cousins is sick, wouldn't their children not turn out right, like maybe deform or not mentally stable? Just asking.
Thanks for watching
if this helps Ibbitson is English (Yorkshire): from the Middle English personal name Ibbot usually a pet form of the female personal name Isabel + -son; Ibbitson
Thank you
1884 Ibbotson
Thank you
Unrelated to Thomas, the two children died in 1872 - during the yellow fever outbreak.
Thank you
The father was born after the American Revlution and lived to the end of the Civil War and lived to the age of 88! Now that is impressive
Yes , thanks for watching
The one without the death date, probably was not buried there. Info may have been put on when wife died so only death date needed to be added. Then for some reason he was buried somewhere else. This happened with my grandmother. I have her spare stone in my yard now. Got it from cemetery.
Maybe so
They may have been mormons. Communities were often isolated in those days as well. There could be very understandable reasons for these odd unions for the harsh living of those days.
Yes . And if it’s a community of Mormons , would that explain it ?
👍
Thanks for watching
People were often very limited in who they associated with, not just in marriage.
Oh yes . They traveled by horse or wagon , the roads were awful , and they lived far apart .
That was common back in that day as semo settle ments were 4 or 5 large family groups
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The cemetery board should be made aware and set the headstones up right.
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Where did you get your flash light? I would love to get one.
Oh goodness I don’t remember. Sorry
1777?
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Do you know how to volunteer for the find a grave ?
No
The metal markers were really different!!
Yes I think they are made of zinc
Thomas was a busy boy LOL
Yes he was