And I think I’ll use an event to show relocation of headstones. Just makes more 
sense to me.

 

Jane in Phoenix

 

From: LegacyUserGroup <legacyusergroup-boun...@legacyusers.com> On Behalf Of 
Scott Hall
Sent: Monday, January 11, 2021 10:46 AM
To: Legacy User Group <legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com>
Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Cemetery questions

 

Thanks for the responses so far.

 

Kathy -- I have a couple of clarifying questions/points for you..

 

One, by Burial Event, are you saying you record the Cemetery in the Events/Fact 
section, and not as an Event Address (reached by clicking the + sign after the 
Burial Date/Place field)?  Just wanted to confirm.

 

Second, my core question was about the relocation of a headstone -- not the 
corpse.  In the case I mentioned, no bodies were ever exhumed/disinterred.  
Their headstones were simply picked up and relocated to a different cemetery.  
The bodies themselves (whats left of them anyway) remain buried under the now 
public park.

 

I think, after this thread, and consideration, the burial notes field is the 
best to indicate the relocation of the headstone.

 

Now, to get FAG to help clean up all the wrong information on the memorials.  
Much bigger problem! -- well over 1,000 memorials indicate incorrect burial 
locations.  Maybe Find A Grave should be renamed Find A Headstone.  Might be 
more accurate.  :)

 

On Sun, Jan 10, 2021 at 3:53 PM Ms Mary K. Lund via LegacyUserGroup 
<legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com <mailto:legacyusergroup@legacyusers.com> > 
wrote:

Scott,

 

If people are buried and then moved, I would record the first interment (as 
usually noted on a death certificate, if any) as the Burial event. If the body 
is subsequently moved, I would note that in the note section with the place and 
date, if known.

 

If the body were formally exhumed for some reason, I would make that a separate 
event with an explanation. This would apply to those you mention being removed 
from the town commons.

 

In some cases it might depend on which burial has the most information. In the 
past people were reburied in cases of a second marriage, or person dying young 
in a different location from subsequent family burials.

 

A cremated person can be buried in multiple locations!

 

Kathy

 

On Sunday, January 10, 2021, 10:05:51 AM CST, Scott Hall <seh0...@gmail.com 
<mailto:seh0...@gmail.com> > wrote: 

 

 

Hey all...

 

Need some advice on how to handle some cemetery relocation issues.

 

First, if a person was buried in Cemetery X, but relocated to Cemetery Y, I've 
been recording it as follows:

 

Original burial information to Burial DatePlace Field

Attach Cemetery Event Address to Burial Date/Place Field

 

Reinterment information to Reburial Event Fields.  Add Cemetery name to 
"Description"

Attach Cemetery Event Address to Event

 

That's pretty straight forward -- record the event as it occurred at the time 
in the principal field (Burial) and the successive event as an Event.

 

But, I've recently come across a number of ancestors for whom their headstones 
were relocated to a different cemetery, but their corpses were not disinterred. 
  This is now challenging me as to how to record the location of the headstone.

 

For those who may have New England ancestors, this issue arises in Connecticut 
where at least two 17th century towns, New Haven and Guilford, relocated the 
headstones of the dead buried on their town commons to cemeteries established 
in the early 19th century.  In both cases, only the headstones were moved--the 
corpses remain buried under the town common, the exact site of the graves now 
lost to history.

 

It seems obvious to record the original burial information as above -- but how 
to denote the relocation of the headstone?  It's important to keep track of, if 
for no other reason than to explain the plethora of Find a Grave and other 
memorials that seem to indicate burial occurred in these newer cemeteries (I'm 
working with Find a Grave in hopes of cleaning this up).

 

I suppose the best way is to record this as a burial note.

 

Your thoughts?

 

If so, then for consistency, should I use Burial notes for actual reinterment 
of corpses instead of Events?  

 

Lastly -- how do you record cemeteries?  Do you use Event Addresses like I do, 
attaching them to the Burial field, do you use Events, or something else?

 

Thanks,

Scott

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