Cemetery Discoveries

Lyre on a Gravestone

I first notice her shoes.

The heel on her left shoe. Substantial. Contacting the ground with stability.
And her right shoe. The delicate way its laces peek out from beneath her dress…a dress with sleeves flowing from elbow to thigh.

Lyre on a Gravestone

Lyre on a Gravestone
Lyre on a Gravestone

And her lyre.

An antiquated instrument often depicted with 7 strings but her’s has only 5. Or, at least, it has fittings for 5 strings if it ever had strings at all. Which brings into focus the name on the gravestone behind her. “Strang” the past-tense of string.

I smile, bemused, wondering if anyone else would notice such a thing.

Cemeteries of Bridgeport, Alabama and Haletown, Tennessee

The Cemetery Detective explores cemeteries between Bridgeport, Alabama and Haletown, Tennessee.

I first became fond of trains while visiting Great Britain the year after I graduated college. That summer, I rode trains all the way to the northern-most reaches of mainland Scotland to a small town called John O’ Groats. Only recently have I rediscovered my love of trains with my exploration of cemeteries around the TAG (Tennessee – Alabama – Georgia) Railroad line leading from Chattanooga, Tennessee to Gadsden, Alabama.

After the TAG Cemeteries Documentary was complete, I further investigated railroads and their relation to nearby cemeteries. As such, I began investigating a railroad line which runs from Haletown, Tennessee to Bridgeport, Alabama. Though I’ve driven under the Running Water Creek Railroad Bridge hundreds of times, I had not investigated its origin. When I began researching this bridge, I found a fascinatingly long history through several iterations of railroad bridges in this area. Below is my Cemetery Documentary on this railroad bridge, U.S. Civil War actions that affected previous bridges, the land of the Cherokee before Euro-Americans moved into the area, a local cornbread festival, and, of course, the culturally significant cemeteries that dot the surrounding landscape.

If you enjoy my cemetery research, please send me a message to let me know of your favorite cemetery. Perhaps I will visit it one day soon.

Best regards:

Keith

The Cemetery Detective explores cemeteries between Haletown, Tennessee and Bridgeport, Alabama.

Join Keith as he not only explores the cemeteries of this historically significant swath of Tennessee and Alabama but also delves into the history of the local communities.

Keith begins at the current Running Water Creek Railroad Bridge. The original bridge was built not far from here prior to the War Between The States. That bridge was demolished by Confederate Soldiers in an effort to stem the advance of Union forces moving into the area to take control of Chattanooga, TN. The bridge has lived through several iterations that fell victim to flood or old age. The current bridge was built in 1968. It is in daily use.

Keith also takes us to Whiteside, Tennessee. Prior to it being called Whiteside, the community was called Running Water. Determined Cherokee Tribal Leader Dragging Canoe lived here the final 10 years of his life. Dragging Canoe staged his struggle against Euro-Americans who were streaming onto Cherokee lands via the Federal Road.

Cemeteries dot the landscape within short distance of the railroad track that cuts through the countryside.

Hale Cemetery
Hale Cemetery
Ladds Switch Cemetery
Graham Cemetery
Clouse Cemetery
Burnett Cemetery
New Hope Cemetery
Whited Family Cemetery
Harris Chapel Cemetery
South Pittsburg City Cemetery
Patton Cemetery
Patton Cemetery Annex
Gunter Cemetery
Abbot Cemetery
Mount Carmel Cemetery
Rocky Springs Cemetery
Bonaventure Cemetery

While in Bridgeport, Alabama, Keith explores the Bridgeport Railroad Museum and is fascinated with the Bridgeport Lift Bridge.

Having crossed Running Water Creek Railroad Bridge earlier in the day, the train enters Bridgeport by crossing the Tennessee River only a few feet from a 1/4 mile long walking bridge.

As a final stop, Keith visits the Virgin of the Poor Shrine in New Hope, Tennessee.

Lunch Time Hunt For An Abandoned Cemetery

I sped away from the city at lunchtime to search for an abandoned cemetery.

This is a selection on the Hunt for an Abandoned Cemetery from the JUNE 2018 Edition of “The Cemetery Detective” Fan Club Newsletter.
Fan Club subscription fees help Keith with expenses associated with his cemetery research, documentation, and cleanup efforts.
Join the Fan Club here: The Cemetery Detective Fan Club

A One Hour Abandoned Cemetery Hunting Trip

Hunting for a Cemetery

I speed away from the city for lunch,
venturing deep into rural Tennessee.

Onto an abandoned government road.
Ducking beneath a locked barricade.

Asphalt gives way to the constant creep of nature.

I scramble through brambles.
Briars cling to my clothing as if to grasp and keep me for their own.
Pricks and thorns dig into my skin as if to taste the pinprick drops of blood they elicit.

Overgrown Cemetery

Clawing my way through scrub so dense a fox would not venture even if trying to outwit a pack of hounds, I am not deterred from my destination.

I find myself in an aromatic thicket of honeysuckle swarmed by bees.
Non-threatening buzzing alerts me to their presence.
They mind me not. I mind them not.

Field Daisy Cemetery

Honeysuckle gives way to field daisies.
Field daisies give way to periwinkle.

Abandoned Building

And, as nature opens up, I find my quest.

There, beyond the confines of an imperfectly laid stone wall, a single grave marker rises above the dense greenery.

Single Gravestone in a Cemetery

I stand amazed at the splendor.
Transfixed by what I have found.
But, alas, a bee’s buzz and strong wafting honeysuckle fragrance
reminds me; lunch is almost over, I must get back to the city.

2018 Keith Harper
From The Cemetery Detective Newsletter June 2018
The Cemetery Detective Fan Club

The Cemetery on Skull Island – Hamilton County, Tennessee

The Cemetery Detective explores Bell Cemetery and Skull Island Cemetery.

In this episode, The Cemetery Detective explores Bell Cemetery and Skull Island Cemetery. Keith has become fascinated with cemeteries that are affected by flood waters both natural and man-made. Keith kayaks on the Tennessee River from Chickamauga Dam upriver to Harrison Tennessee where he investigates homesteads that were flooded in 1940 after the dam’s completion. Bell Cemetery is on a wooded hilltop on John A Patten Island. From here, Keith paddles upriver past Sequoyah Nuclear Power Plant which overlooks Skull Island. Once on the shore of Skull Island, Keith investigates a cemetery and the grave sites that were moved from Norman-Eldridge Cemetery prior to 1940.

Chickamauga Dam Upriver of Chattanooga, TN

In 1936, the Tennessee Valley Authority began construction on the Chickamauga Dam a few miles upriver of Chattanooga, Tennessee.

As part of the dam’s construction and the eventual flooding and creation of Chickamauga Lake, TVA commissioned the relocation of grave sites from 24 cemeteries within this newly created flood plain. Chickamauga
dam was constructed using limestone from a nearby quarry. I am always interested in visiting area quarries. Understanding an area’s geology allows me to find similarities in rock used by local gravestone carvers.

Old Harrison, Tennessee

Chickamauga Dam was completed in 1940. The waters began to rise immediately flooding several communities. One of these flooded communities was the town of Old Harrison, Tennessee. Long before the waters came up and overtook their land, residents made provisions to move to higher ground. In the final days, town residents threw elaborate parties celebrating the fact that their land would be consumed by the lake.

One of Chickamauga Dam’s purposes is to provide downstream flood control of the greater Chattanooga area. As part of their flood control initiative, TVA lowers lake levels during winter months. Areas of Old Harrison that are submerged in summer are visible from November through mid-April. Exploring during this time of year lead to my finding abandoned foundations and a few relics of years-gone-by. In Old Harrison, I discovered an old asphalt roadbed.
The road was once in daily use. However, it now lies unusable and is underwater through much of the year. Though the outside temperature began the day fairly warm in the sunlight, temperatures dropped as the hour went by and the river water was almost ice cold. Before leaving Old Harrison, I donned additional protective foul weather gear as protection against the cold.

Bell Cemetery

Bell Cemetery rests on a wooded hilltop upon John A. Patten Island. Bell Cemetery was in use in the mid 1800’s. It now lies abandoned. Though I found indications of several grave sites, I only discovered one gravestone. For me, Bell Cemetery is a fine example of a remarkable phenomenon of abandoned cemeteries. There was minuscule evidence of a cemetery being on this land.
In a few more years, all physical indications of this being a cemetery will cease to exist.

Sequoyah Nuclear Power Plant

Sequoyah Nuclear Power Plant lies on the Tennessee River approximately at river mile 484. Steam rising from its two cooling towers billow over Skull Island one mile further upriver. Sequoyah first went into operation in 1981. According to TVA’s website, the fission reactor core generates steam that turns a turbine to generate enough electricity to meet the needs of 1.3 million homes in the Tennessee Valley. As I paddle past, I am reminded of a story of two young brothers buried in Skull Island Cemetery.

Skull Island Cemetery

Skull Island comes into sight. Though this island is accessible via roadway, approaching by kayak gives me a better indication of the river’s impact. Grave sites in Skull Island Cemetery were moved here from Norman-Eldridge Cemetery prior to its land’s flooding in 1940 upon the completion of Chickamauga Dam. This cemetery is in disuse and it’s only maintenance is performed by the caretakers of Skull Island or an occasion visit by area school children who take an interest in the property.

Since Skull Island contains a campground, I set up a tent and spend time practicing night time photography and light painting photography shortly after sunset.

A Tree Growing Around A Gravestone

An engulfed gravestone growing into a tree’s trunk.

Gravestone inside Tree

Engulfed Gravestone

This is, perhaps, my favorite picture from a cemetery I visited last June outside Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
I’ve looked at this picture a dozen times. With each viewing, I imagine the slow creep of this tree’s bark. The bark engulfs the gravestone. To me, it signifies the slow creep of time. The slow creep of time that eventually engulfs our life histories. Sure enough, time (the tree’s bark) will eventually complete its encapsulation.
I wonder what will happen if the tree falls one day only to be covered by leaves and mud. Given the correct heat and pressure and moisture, will the tree eventually become petrified wood?
A tree becoming rock.
After dying.
After engulfing a gravestone.
Of a man who died.
After living a full and glorious life.
The tree, which engulfs the gravestone, protects the gravestone for millennia.
The idea gives me chillbumps.

And, then, I look at the picture again. I notice a detail I’ve not seen before in the lower left corner. The fern fronds are SO delicate. So delicate in contrast to the unrelenting force of this gravestone…slowly being engulfed.

TreeAroundGravestone

Lichen Growth on West-East Facing Comb Graves in Sparta, Tennessee

Comb Grave LichenI’m almost embarrassed to admit I’m pretty fascinated with lichen growth on gravestones.

During my visits to study comb graves of the Cumberland Plateau, I encountered quite a few comb graves with West-East orientation. Of course, you would expect this. It is very common for bodies to be buried with their feet toward the East. The reasoning behind this is when the rapture occurs, the body will rise up facing eastward toward the coming of Christ.
Because of this orientation, the right sides face south and the left sides face north. Remember back in elementary school (Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts) when you learned that moss gross on the north sides of trees? The same is sometimes true for gravestones.

You normally don’t see a drastic difference of lichen on the north vs. south side of a gravestone. However, since the roofs of Comb Graves are slanted, the north sides receive quite a bit less sunlight throughout the year allowing lichen to, more readily, grow.

Here is one example of lichen growing on the north side of this comb grave (left) vs. almost no lichen growth on the south (right) side.

2017 Cemetery Detective Year in Review

2017 was a fantastic year full of cemetery exploration.

2017 was a fantastic year full of cemetery exploration.
Highlights include:
Completing my Submerged Cemetery Documentary
Getting featured in an Adventure Magazine for my Cemetery Research efforts
Traveling to Spain to study the cemeteries in the north of the country.

Other highlights are listed below.

Check my main page to learn about my cemetery research for 2018.


December 2017 – Cemeteries, Cameras, and Flashlights

When I was in college, I learned the art of astro-photography and darkroom film development. Being an astronomy geek, I worked at the school’s observatory helping set up the telescope and cameras. Back then, we would spend all night shooting a roll of film then spend the next morning developing the film in light-proof canisters. A lot has changed in the world of photography. Yet, the scientific principles of photography remain the same; aperture, focus (and focal length) ISO, and shutter speed is what it’s all about. Of course, the creative side is another story.

In the month of December, I’ve reawakened my love of photography. Combining photography with my love of cemeteries, I’m working to increase my understanding of creative cemetery photography. Here is a picture I took last night at Chattanooga’s Forest Hills Cemetery. Expect more photography in the coming months.

cemetery photography

In addition to cemetery photography, I’ve devoted much of my free time in December to studying cemeteries affected by flood waters both natural and man-made. Here’s an on-location photo from a cemetery I’m researching outside of a nuclear power plant. Expect a brand new Cemetery Detective mini-documentary on this subject in the very near future.

I’d like to take a moment to wish a very Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to all my readers and fans.
Please check back often. I have a lot of cemetery adventures in store for you in 2018.

My best:

Keith


November 2017 – A Church With A Rock In It

November was such a warm and pleasant month I spent much of it in outdoor pursuits including hiking, biking, and kayaking DeSoto State Park near Mentone, Alabama.

During one of my trips there, I found Sallie Howard Chapel also known as “The Church with a Rock in It.” This chapel was built around a huge boulder jutting into the inside of the church. The boulder acts as the outside wall behind the pulpit.
It’s a fascinating church (with cemetery) and the state park is well worth a visit.


October 2017 – Magazine Articles, Newspaper Write-Ups, and Travel Abroad

October has been one of the most interesting months I’ve had in quite some time.

Points of interest during October:

– Interviewed by The Royal Gazette (Bermuda’s National Newspaper): A reporter saw my video documentary on The Cemeteries of Bermuda.
The newspaper published a newspaper article about my visits to the island.

– Researched the Cemeteries of Northern Spain: After months of planning, I toured the country by train and bus to study the old world European cemeteries of San Sebastian, Pamplona, Figueres, Girona, and Madrid. I will be posting articles in the coming days. Please check back often.

– Featured in an Adventure Magazine: Get Out Chattanooga, our regional Adventure Magazine published a featured article on my research of The Submerged Cemetery at Mullins Cove. I spent a day with a reporter. She interviewed me as we paddled 7 miles round-trip to the submerged cemetery. The article on this particular cemetery was featured in the October Issue.

the cemetery detective

the cemetery detective article

Check back soon for updates on my cemetery research trip to northern Spain.


September 2017 – A Busy September for The Cemetery Detective

Although summer is not yet over, the beginning of September has brought a respite from the heat. Warmer temperatures will, surely, return. But, for now, I’m enjoying cooler temperatures while exploring our area’s most interesting cemeteries.

At the end of August, I produced a short video dealing with my fascination of Cemetery Fences (linked below). If you enjoy my videos, please consider subscribing to my Cemetery YouTube Channel.

I have several great videos in store for you in the coming weeks including a video documentary of my upcoming Cemetery Research Trip to northern Spain. While in Spain, I will research the cemeteries of The Pyrenees, San Sebastian, and Figueres. If you live in any of those areas of Spain, please drop me a note. I always love meeting fellow cemetery enthusiasts along my journeys.

The Chain Link Fences of Rotten Bayou Cemetery
I had never been a fan of chain link fences in a cemetery….until I visited Rotten Bayou Cemetery in Diamondhead, Mississippi.


August 2017 – Cemetery Documentaries and Continued Research

Sometimes I root through my archives of cemetery pictures, video, and research documentation.  After searching through hundreds of folders, I realize I’ve published only a fraction of my archives.  This month, I’m pleased to announce the publication of two cemetery documentaries that have been on my mind all summer.

1) The Submerged Cemetery of Mullins Cove
This is one of the most fascinating cemetery stories I’ve ever researched.  This cemetery has been affected by rising waters for more than a century.  The Submerged Cemetery at Mullins Cove investigates the life histories of Henry, Zilpha, and Moses Long.  It explores the topography and geology of Mullins Cove, Tennessee.  And, it researches the reasons why this cemetery is underwater.
15 Minutes in Length and PACKED with information.

 

2)  The Cemeteries of St. Thomas, Tortola, Bermuda, and Newport
Earlier this year, I was incredibly fortunate to be invited to work as delivery crew on a 62′ sailboat.  We moved the sailboat from Tortola BVI to Portsmouth, RI.  On this journey, I added to my list of cemeteries I’ve already visited in these areas.  
This Cemetery Documentary chronicles my trip, the excitement of traveling on the open ocean, and the cemeteries I explored along the way.


July 2017 – Upcoming Cemetery Research

It’s been a busy summer thus far.

During June, I attended the Association For Gravestone Studies Annual Conference in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.  This was my fourth conference.  It is always an uplifting experience being around such knowledgeable and passionate cemetery enthusiasts.

At this conference, I gave a presentation on my research of The Submerged Cemetery At Mullins Cove.
I can spend hours speaking about this cemetery.  Its history is fascinating.  If your civic group would like me to give this presentation, please visit my “Public Speaking” page for scheduling information.

July is going to be busy, also.  I’m putting final touches on a new Cemetery Documentary to be released by mid-month.

Additionally, I’m preparing for a cemetery research trip to Northern Spain in the early fall.  I’ll visit the major cemeteries in San Sebastian, Girona, and Madrid.  I’m also planning on a tour of cemeteries in the eastern Pyrenees.  If you live in that area and are interested in the local cemeteries, I would love to meet you.

I’ll leave you with a couple photographs from my trip in May to the U.S. and British Virgin Islands:

cemetery_st.johns
Moravian Cemetery
tortola_cemetery
Tortola Cemetery

June 2017 – Two Cemetery Projects Underway

Check back often for updates.

1) Underwater Cemetery:

I have become fascinated with cemeteries impacted by water.
Rising waters in rivers, drought stricken lakes, and coastal areas all have affected cemeteries.
I am currently studying a cemetery in the middle of a lake.
This will be the subject of my next mini-documentary and I will also make a presentation on this cemetery during the Association for Gravestone Studies Annual Conference.


If you’re planning on attending the conference, please look me up and say “hi.” I’d love to meet you.

Flooded cemetery underwater graves.

2) Cemetery Reclamation:

I’m writing this at 11:51 PM after yet another long day in one of our local cemeteries.
With a chainsaw, lop-shears, an axe, and a strong back, I’ve taken on a project of reclaiming a long-forgotten cemetery.
When I first visited, I could not walk from one end to the other due to thickets, thorns, and brier patches. Taking care to maintain the integrity of all grave markers, I have almost completed the reclamation effort. Stay tuned to this website and my YouTube channel for a complete update.

Abandoned cemeteries.
This cemetery was completely overgrown but I’m making great progress in finding all headstones by removing the vegetation.  When finished, I plan to leave many shade trees.  However, the undergrowth will be cut away.  Tombstones will be easy to find.

Stay Tuned…


A recent mini-documentary:
The Forgotten Cemetery of Polk County Tennessee

Nestled on a forested hilltop within The Cherokee National Forest lies Rock Creek Cemetery. Even its proper name is in doubt. USGS maps, local residents, and descendants of those buried here disagree on its name. As the forest closes in on Rock Creek, this cemetery risks being lost forever.

The journey is part of the adventure and this trip was no exception. Rock Creek is surrounded by the beauty of the Ocoee river valley. This abandoned grave yard contains notable figures in Polk County’s history. In addition to the town’s founding fathers, a Revolutionary War soldier is buried here.
Join me as I search for this culturally significant cemetery.

Rock Creek Cemetery – Polk County, Tennessee

 

2017 Extensive Research of Cemeteries:

Big plans are underway this year. Check this website and my YouTube Channel for frequent updates.
I love feedback. So, please leave your comments and drop me notes when you see something here you like.

Cheers:

Keith

A 400 Million Year Old Cemetery

What constitutes a cemetery? Do you ever think about the idea of a burying ground that transcends the strict and cultural definition of a traditional cemetery?

A 400 Million Year Old Cemetery?

What constitutes a cemetery? I understand there are legal classifications and procedural definitions. But, do you ever think about the idea of a burying ground that transcends the strict and cultural idea of a traditional cemetery?

Is a pet cemetery actually a cemetery? If humans designate land where they bury their pets, it certainly fits my definition of a cemetery. Is human interaction needed for it to be considered a cemetery? I’ve read about elderly elephants who are aware they are going to die. They migrate to ancient elephant graveyards where their relatives come to mourn their passing. There are no humans to designate this as a cemetery…but the elephants think it’s one. What about pre-historic graveyards; the final resting places of beings that lived millions of years ago? Is it unreasonable to stretch our imaginations by exploring the far reaches of what, actually, constitutes a cemetery?

Sometimes, I enjoy contemplating the actual definition of a cemetery. One of these internal contemplations happened on a trip to explore Cowan Cemetery.

Cowan Cemetery

I recently took a trip to Meigs County, Tennessee to visit Cowan Cemetery. This cemetery dates back to the 1850’s as a cemetery for Cowan family members. There are many fieldstones here denoting unnamed gravesites. A few of the fieldstone markers are hewn into triangular shapes. Though not perfectly angled, they remind me of endstones from tent gravesites found in some Tennessee cemeteries and other cemeteries in the southeast. One grave marker displays fantastic “Hand of God” symbology. The hand, clutching lilies and roses, is downward facing with an outstretched pointing index finger.

Cowan Cemetery is a short paddle away from an area known as Rattlesnake Point. Rattlesnake Point is where my Father’s family used to hold their yearly family reunions on the banks of the Hiwassee River. The Hiwassee River is a tributary of the Tennessee River. Its unique geology makes for joyful fossil hunting. I spent those family reunions searching for fossils on the banks of the Hiwassee river. I clearly remember the first time I found a fossil. Though my family wasn’t at all interested in my explorations, I fantasized that I would be recognized as a great dinosaur fossil hunter by the scientific community.

Fossilized Rock

In reality, the fossil I found wasn’t from the Dinosaur era. Instead, it was filled with Brachiopod fossils from the Devonian period. This geological period dates back 400 million years; long before Dinosaurs appeared on earth.

I often think back to my first fossil find and its influence on my interest in cemeteries. When you think about it, that rock is similar to a cemetery in that it is the final resting place for hundreds of beings. It’s kind of like a cemetery; a 400 million year old Brachiopod cemetery.

Rotten Bayou Cemetery – Diamondhead Mississippi

If good fences make good neighbors then Rotten Bayou is a very neighborly cemetery, indeed.

rotten bayou cemetery signI’ve never liked the feeling of being fenced in.
However, I do like the coziness that fences provide.
The Poet Robert Frost oft remarked that “Good Fences Make Good Neighbors.”

Evidently, this sentiment holds true even after death.

It’s an interesting phenominon the way in which cemeteries encourage the use of fences.

Fences can be implied by features as simple as low curbing around family plots and individual gravesites.
In some southern cemeteries, particularly in the Ozarks and Appalachia, this curbing is taken to an extreme level forming 24″ tall concrete fences.

Wood is regularly used in dryer climates. But, where the air is humid, decay degrades wooden fences rather quickly over time.

Fences made of wrought iron have been used in cemeteries for generations.

And lava, lava in volcanic island cemeteries
seemingly lasts forever.

Of all of the types of fences I’ve witnessed, one of the most interesting uses of fences is in a cemetery I recently visited in Diamondhead, Mississippi.

This is Rotten Bayou Cemetery. Being near Bay St. Louis on the Gulf Coast, its substrate is mostly granular sand. The cemetery has a long-held

rotten_bayou_cemetery
Chain Link Fence in Rotten Bayou Cemetery

tradition that burial plots are free-of-charge as long as individual gravesites are clearly marked off.

This provision has lead many families to use chain link fencing as demarkation of their loved-ones’ gravesites.

Chain link as far as the eye can see.

If good fences make good neighbors then Rotten Bayou is a very neighborly cemetery, indeed.
Rotten_Bayou_Cemetery_Overview

Link to the YouTube video of Rotten Bayou Cemetery

The Cemeteries of St. Thomas, Tortola, Bermuda, and Newport

The Cemetery Detective explores the cemeteries of the US Virgin Islands, British Virgin Islands, Bermuda, and Newport Rhode Island.

This video and write-up chronicles my recent journey from Tortola, British Virgin Islands to Bermuda and then onward to Rhode Island. I was incredibly fortunate to be invited to work on a beautiful sailing vessel being delivered over 1700 nautical miles across the north Atlantic ocean. On my journey, I visited as many cemeteries as I could while still performing my duties.

 
 

I learned to sail several years ago.
While most of my sailing has been on inland lakes, I’ve logged about 3,000 offshore miles in the Caribbean and North Atlantic.

On my most recent trip, I was 1 of a 4 man crew delivering a 62′ sailboat from the BVIs, northward to Portsmouth, Rhode Island, USA.

I arrived in St. Thomas, USVI early on a Monday morning. Shots of Caribbean rum were freely handed out at the Cyril E. King airport. The drinks gave everyone a feeling we were truly in the islands, mon.

On the taxi ride to Charlotte Amalie Ferry Port, I noticed row after row of crypts stacked two to three high.  Since I only had 90 minutes on St. Thomas before my ferry departed, I sprinted across Veterans Drive for a quick visit the Moravian Cemetery of St. Thomas.

Distinguishing aspects of this cemetery included simple dirt burial mounds (tumuli) covering some graves.   The majority of interments are within above ground concrete crypts. I am still fascinated with the personalized memorials inscripted by family members and loved-ones.

Moravian Cemetery – St. Thomas

My trip on the Fast Ferry took about 40 minutes to reach Rhode Town, the capital of Tortola BVI. Once back on land, I walked miles and miles
to visit St. Georges Anglican Church Cemetery, St. Paul’s Cemetery at Sea Cow Bay, and numerous unnamed cemeteries tucked into the hillsides along the southern edges of Tortola.

Sailing The Atlantic

Sailboat delivery is something I first experienced in 2015.  Many boat owners like to keep their boats in warmer climates during the winter. Since ocean crossing requires the expertise of competent crew, owners hire crew members to move their boats southward in the fall and northward in the spring.

Delivery crews work at the whim of the weather.  A significant challenge in sailing a boat on the open ocean is the search for a weather window providing acceptable weather for the majority of the passage.  Once offshore winds were favorable, we motored out of Nanny Cay and along the Sir Francis Drake Channel.  Turning the boat to starboard at Frenchman’s Cay, we motored across the archipelago to spend one night at Jost Van Dyke before sailing northward to Bermuda.

For the next week, it was nothing but sky and water as far as the eye could see. But, we were kept company, somedays, by dolphins.

The Cemeteries of Bermuda

We arrived in Bermuda, unscathed from the journey.  Anyone who has sailed into Bermuda knows the reassurance you feel upon hearing Bermuda radio on channel 16.  The waters around Bermuda are notoriously dangerous.  However, navigation markers lead the way to the Town Cut at St. Georges.  With the yellow quarantine flag raised high, we cleared customs and were free to roam the island.  The next stop, after customs, was the White Horse saloon for Dark n’ Stormies.  Many tales of sea going adventures have been told here….and some of the tales are actually true.

This was my third visit to the island.  Using scooters for transportation during my visits, I have explored every major Bermudian cemetery (that I know of).

 

presbyterian_bermuda
Christ Church of Scotland Cemetery
St. Peter's Cemetery
St. Peter’s Church Cemetery
St. Peter's Cemetery
St. Peter’s Cemetery
St. Paul's Cemetery
St. Paul’s Church Cemetery
zinc_on_bermuda
St. Paul’s Cemetery Zinc Marker
cemetery_bermuda
St. Mark’s Cemetery
bermuda_churchyard
St. John’s Anglican Cemetery
naval_cemetery
Royal Naval Cemetery
steep cemetery
Old Devonshire Church Cemetery
military cemetery
Military Cemetery at Dawes Bay
marsden_bermuda
Marsden Cemetery
sailing_gravestone
Grace Methodist Church Cemetery
bright_church_colors
Emmanuel Methodist Church Cemetery

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sailing Across the Gulf Stream

After a quick supply re-provisioning trip to the local market in St. Georges, we quickly prepped the boat for its final leg of the journey.

Through the town cut leaving St. Georges and across the bowditch seamount, we readied ourselves for the ever treacherous waters of the Gulf Stream.

Sailing across the Gulf Stream can be a hairy proposition.  Weather and sea state can change in the blink of an eye.  Sailors have to be prepared to alter sail trim and reefing points at a moment’s notice.

Arrival In Rhode Island

Days and days passed but we soon sighted Block Island and Narragansett Bay.  I’ve been to Newport Rhode Island a few times and I always enjoy visiting the cemeteries there.

 
Sailing n’ Cemeteries

Sailing and Cemeteries
Sailing and Cemeteries

As you have probably guessed from this video. I have two obsessions, sailing and cemeteries. This final picture captures them both perfectly.

Thank you for allowing me to share my obsessions and my journey.