Showing posts with label Calvary Cemetery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calvary Cemetery. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Way Back Wednesday (189/365)

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TIME: July 8, 2008
PLACE: Calvary Cemetery, St. Louis MO
SUBJECT:  James and Stella

Seven years ago, I dragged these guys to the cemetery to search for graves as part of my genealogy research.
James was 9 and Stella was 4.
I don’t remember where Claudia was that day…probably she had spent the night at a friend’s house.
Stella had broken her thumb about a month earlier when she tripped over the Wii Fit box one of them left in the middle of the floor.
I’m pretty sure I had asked one of them to “Pick up the box before someone trips over it and hurts themselves.”
5 minutes later, Stella did just that.
I am psychic.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Cemetery Sentinels (237/365)

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Loin des sepultures celebres
Vers un cimitiere isole
Mon coeur, comme un tambour voile
Va battant des marches funebres.

To the solemn graves,
near a lonely cemetery,
my heart like a muffled drum is beating funeral marches.

 
Charles Pierre Baudelaire (French poet, critic and translator, 1821-1867) Les Fleurs du Mal. Le Guignon


TIME:  12:04 PM & 12:10 PM
PLACE:  Calvary Cemetery, St. Louis, MO
SUBJECT:  Headstones & Moss-covered angel

I went to some cemeteries in St. Louis to seek out gravesites of my relatives.  The St. Louis Archdiocese has a wonderful website where you can search for burials.  The results will include, among other information, the cemetery, section and lot number of the internment.  At the cemetery office, additional information about the plots are often available.  The workers at Calvary Cemetery are very helpful.  I have been to this cemetery several times and find it fascinating.  After finding my latest genealogical gravesites, I wandered through the older Italian section.  That section had rows with many large statues on top of the stones as seen in the first photo.  About half the stones had porcelain portraits. The burials in this section, ranged from the late 1900s to the early to mid 1950s.  There were many children and young people buried here.  When I retuned home, I was able to trace several of the internments back to death certificates on the Missouri State Archives website.  All those people were living, breathing human beings; they touched someone’s life and were loved at one time.  Now, all that is left to prove that they were once here is the stone that marks their final resting place.  It makes me think…100 years from now, will there be a person viewing my grave in the same way?  It is a very humbling thought and can help me put my day-to-day frustrations into some much needed perspective.