As a genealogist I can say that alot of people don't know where their ancestors are buried. These videos are a blessing. And the humility in your voice is comforting and heart warming. Thank you.
I was thinking the same thing.... they're left in peace out in nature... the only thing is I wish someone would put a plaque up and maybe but some flowers down on each grave. Clean them off maybe
In my home country of Liberia, we have a day specific for looking after graves and it’s called Decoration Day. Family members take flowers to decorate the graves of their loved ones after clearing the graves of any dirt or grass and if the grave needs repainting, they paint it. And if the headstone needs the writing on it written again, they do that. I think all countries should practice Decoration Day
In the U.S., it's called Memorial Day. But hardly anyone looks after graves. After the Civil War, some ladies in Columbus, Mississippi started to look after the graves of both the Union and Confederate dead. It was called "Decoration Day", which became Memorial Day. Other towns claim they started Memorial Day. I don't know the truth of it, but since you're from Liberia you must've inherited Decoration Day from the U.S. early on, after the founding of that nation.
Oh! That's what Decoration Day really is. When I was young, a long time ago, we would celebrate Decoration Day. Dad would dress us up and we would ride the trolley in Philly and go put flags on the graves of our relatives. I was about 5 or 6 and I still have old pictures of me in front of the tombstone. I have to get back to Philly as soon as lock down lifts and place some flags and flowers on my family's grave. Good reason to go back home, I miss Philly.
Thats because they're the last family member with a certain name that never married or was married and had nor kids(for example the last member of Abraham Lincoln's family died in the 70s)
@sickpuupy That seems like a good idea, except could you image the outcry from the family and the community; if an inmate was found to be standing on the grave of someone he killed.[Sounds like a Steven King Novel] Under those circumstances it's not out of the realm of possibilities. I do understand what you're saying, and using people in some type of correctional manner might be a good idea. A community service program perhaps, or scared straight might be workable.
@@Torontogal1973 violent offenders aren't allowed out to do things like this. It's non-violent ones. Like fraud, tax offenders, someone in possession of small amounts of drugs.
Most people do not give a second thought to old graves. These were people that helped build this great country of ours. We should have a moment of silence for the people that helped in giving us every thing we have today. They were Americans and we should honor them.
I love old graves. The idea anyway. When I lived in en gland us kids would go to the village cemetery to smoke cigarettes. These were downright creepy ! And somatic as I'd have to walk a mile from the bus stop in another village to get home in the dark. Sheep on one side and a vast empty field on the other with one streetlight which was right in front of the aforementioned svry place. . . . I miss it!
t e r I N E E D L E R I live in a place called Gallows Hill which has a second placename so not to put off property buyers off. After work, I walk home in the dark. Daylight hours are shorter here in winter months. I never feel daunted by the placename Gallows Hill. In fact, I didn't know my place was called that and still is. I know the other name that is sunny. I believe that if you look after your deads like Native Americans and Buddhists do in honouring them, they look after you.
As sad as it is, we will all be forgotten at some point. Slave or not, these were people who loved, lived, cried and hurt in their time. I would say, everyone watching this should say a little prayer for them.
I really like the comment you made anout dying twice. I have seen many videos of another channel and that person will not read the names . When I have sadly gone to a cemetery I will walk around and read names out loud . I have always felt saying the names gives proof that the person had existed , lived, had family and hopefully had friends. This is the first video of yours I have watched . Thank you .
@@daleellison6759 wow.. I bet you have had some really interesting experiences . So many people are afraid of visiting a cemetery . I have to admit I have never been in one at night. I have been interested in reading headstones since I was a little girl . I am from a small town in Louisiana , (I live in Texas ), when we would visit my grandparents me and my sister would always go to a rather big cemetery just across the street . Of course I don't remember any names and we had no family buried there. I just remember that it was very old. I know I will never return there as all my relatives are gone now . Thank you for your reply and thanks for caring about long lost people .
I do that too...I go read the names, the date of birth and death, and ponder what kind of person that was that once walked the earth, what kind of life did they live....
UPDATE: DEC. 28, 2019 I went to this cemetery on Christmas Day to visit Alva's grave. I noticed a huge dead pine tree had fallen across the remains of the road leading up into the cemetery. There's another one dead, but still standing and it's only a matter of time before it goes. I was probably the first person to visit Alva's grave in at least 25 to 30 years maybe longer at or near Christmas. In fact I may have been the first one to have made the visit on Christmas Day to that cemetery in at least that long or longer. I sat for a moment next to her grave and told her she wasn't forgotten anymore nor was anyone else buried there. And while I couldn't guarantee that a cleanup and salvage operation would ever take place, I was gonna do my best to pull it off. If I go down, I'll go down having fought till the bitter end for her and everyone buried there including the veterans. I would've given everything I had to win. When I got up to leave, I looked at her picture and said Merry Christmas Alva!
@@danbruner3563 Happy New Year to you too. There's a cemetery in Memphis that has a very similar history and look, it's called Zion Cemetery. Look it up.😁
@@bubblybubbles4023 I just found a video here on youtube while doing a search for that cemetery. VERY INTERESTING! It was abandoned in the 1970's and then a cleanup began I think it said somewhere in the late 90's I believe? It's 15 acres and 11 more need to be cleared. The cemetery here is according to the tax records for the city 200' on all four sides. The graves are from the survey I've made in a concentrated area and not as scattered from one end to the other as I had thought. This will make it alot easier to focus first on the area where the graves are and clean up that part first. If anymore are on the hillside( which I haven't found ) we can find them as we work our way down.
Omg wow. Soooo many spirits just watching you. Not in a sinister way...more out of curiosity. Love ur videos. Raw footage no background music...no stupid fake stunts to get views, informative, interesting and well done! Thank you for doing this video i enjoyed it. :)
Mark D : i was about to type the same thing. Judging from the iris and daffodils planted around the walled section, these people left some loved ones behind.. maybe they could somehow be tracked down and contacted, and/or get a group of good Samaritans together to clean the area up?
Many years ago, we would pack a lunch and go to the cemetery to clean the headstones and grave. This was an all day excursion. I was young and bored so I walked around the cemetery looking at pictures that were on the headstone, until then I didn’t know children could die.
I heard this was popular in the states until the 50s and 60s. Families would go out on memorial day have potlucks, visit their departed and living family, then everyone would pitch in and clean up the family plot. I've been told stories by my much older cousins that our family would donate time to their community (Youngstown Ohio Ukrainian community from 1910s - 1970s) at the church cemetery. They would do things like clean the graves for the generations that were older and couldn't do the work themselves or had no family to help for one reason or another, they would dig graves for the poorer (which is relative because everyone was poor) families that couldn't pay, etc. My daughters and I go out at the very least a few times a year and spend a few hours cleaning and decorating our family Graves. Hopefully this tradition will resurface for everyone once again.
My time left on earth is short. I told my family to cremate me and (for all I care) flush my ashes down the toilet. It doesn't take long for family and friends to forget where their loved ones/ancestors are buried.
Though I agree, I hate to see any memorial site left to nature,, but I have to admit,, when I hear the birds, and natural quite,, these folks are truly resting in peace. I pray for their souls. Thanks for your efforts, very interesting.
1956rider The Bible says to be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord !!! No Praying once your dead 💀 your dead ! It’s just a body !! Sure study the word!
Ashes to ashes dust to dust. It's the cycle . We return to the earth our bodies break down the enriched soil feeds the plants, the plants become homes to animals, new humans eat the animals and plants. Nothing is wasted. It all cycles . No matter how much we try to fight it or prevent it. The cycle continues.
I’m guessing this might be an African American cemetery. Miss Alva May Hawkins looked like a black woman from her picture, and when I looked her up I was able to get a better picture, and she def does look African American. African Americans and Caucasian’s usually weren’t buried in the same cemeteries, and if they were, I don’t think they got the actual tomb stones, It would have been a rock or something. Plus she passed in the ‘60s, and even then, African Americans and Caucasians had separate cemeteries. I’m still searching for more info tho. Also the way some of the tomb stones are make me think it’s an African American Cemetery as well. --------(Edit)----------- So I found more information, I did some deep digging. Miss Alva May Hawkins was an African American woman who was born in Georgia. She was a maid, with her highest level of education being 6th grade. In 1940 she lived in McCray, Muscogee, Georgia on Whitesvill Road. There were 4 other members in her household ranging from the ages of 45-17. Her mothers name was Leola Hawkins, I didn’t find any info about her father, and she had 2 sisters and 1 brother. I was able to find these old census records and find some info and I’m def looking for more.
Thank goodness we look after the cemeteries in the UK. 1971 and that place is in a terrible state. They will still have family that is living today. It's very sad
I actually think it’s Beautiful.. Nature and Natural.. And peaceful.. like the wilderness.. we are all going to turn to dust.. And I would rather be here than in some fancy huge cemetery.. But I love Nature..
This is private property and older family gone and they still have plots left to buried other family and don’t have the resources to fix them up. Or enough family that cares😞
I could be wrong, but i believe it is no longer considered private property as the military bought out huge swaths of land, including whole towns....as TimesThree suggested, try contacting DoD as they may have more information
I don't think you are right about DOD and Veterans Affairs cleaning stones. I have never seen or heard of any such service in my area. In fact, I've tried to get help from them on leaning stones and was told to contact a monument service.
NEWS ON THIS CEMETERY: I contacted the property tax office here and found that first of all there's no listed owner only an address which is a P.O. Box number and nothing more. The lady I talked to at the property tax office couldn't confirm who owned it and she was almost certain the City didn't. So I licked a stamp and sent a letter to whoever may be on the other end of that P.O. Box informing them of who I am and what I would like to do with permission. I included all my contact info and haven't heard anything back as of yet and that was three weeks ago. On another note, during my last visit out there to sweep some of the vegetation and pine straw off the slabs of the graves, I noticed in one corner of the cemetery ( no graves located there )that surveyors had been there as a bunch of vegetation had been knocked down and I found old wood stakes with orange tape marking the entire perimeter of the cemetery. The property just outside of here is for sale so whoever owns that property probably had to do that legally to make sure that the cemetery isn't disturbed and to find out where it's boundaries are. This is really strange. Nobody can tell me who owns that cemetery. I want to make sure I cover all aspects of this and get permission IF POSSIBLE before I head out there with an army of volunteers. My next course of action may be to contact the newspaper and tv news stations to see if they'd be willing to do a story on it. Maybe then we could get some answers.
Dan Bruner hello. You need to check The closest plantation in the area check the closest three and that way you can pinpoint the Moravians some plantations did share their burial grounds so within that area check whoever was the closest within 100 miles to the plantation so that way you can narrow down who the owner is it looks like if those were slave burials of burials before they always stay close to their families so it should be possible that you can find it through that way most tax office and I specially enjoyed it with the war in the break up of slavery a lot of records have been lost but somehow I’m still stand that can help you pinpoint who is who
great Job you're doing Dan, to keep these folks memories and history alive, i'm writing this on April 7th 2020, and i hope by now some progress has been made,, i'm surprised that the local community doesn't come together and a get a bunch of people in their and clean the place up and show some respect for these folks who are resting there,, mostly the military folks !,,, pleae keep us updated
Despite the overgrowth and disrepair I felt a peace about this place! Thank you for being so respectful! Really wish someone would go in an tackle a clean up! Maybe try contacting the Local VFW and see if they can offer any help or advice.
Hey Love, bring a broom with you. that way, you can clean them all without cleaning with your feet. That way you don't feel like you are disrespecting the deceased. Thank you for your work.❤
You should notify the state historical society or the closest university's archeology department so this site can be investigated and preserved or moved. Either would have the resources to find the history of the cemetery and maybe surviving family.
Unfortunately I tried that with an old slave cemetery I found. See “The Tale Of Samantha Street” video. Nobody cared. And probably even less so with this one since burials continues to the 1980’s.
Call the local office of the NAACP. They might give advice since it seems most of the burials are of black people. (Going by what you said and also the picture on one of the more recent stones.) Once, someone cared, and whoever owns the cemetery might have some legal obligation to maintain it that they are getting away with ignoring. There are organizations that might help you make people care, or who can tell you who else to approach, if you want. Have you tried media coverage?
Local NAACP chapter was contacted about the aforementioned Samantha Street cemetery. They didn’t care. Contacted the paper that previously did an article on our explorations. They also had no interest.
Sidestep Adventures Jeez, I'm sorry. It's hard to believe that the world is as it is now. I vaguely remember when some building was being constructed in NYC a forgotten slave/black grave yard was uncovered. There was an archological dig and bones and artifacts were recovered. The building site allocated land and after it was completed everything was reinterred in this space with a big marker giving info on what was discovered, etc. Nicely landscaped, very peaceful. Maybe you could interest NatGeo or the Smithsonian, but probably their funds are committed also. Weren't there a number of Veterans there? Is there a Black Veterans association? I'll stop. It's probably a lost cause. I just hate to see history lost. 60 Minutes? Ok, I'll shut up.
it is listed in the find a grave website it has 106 graves listed even the woman's picture on the stone is listed her sister posted on the website find a grave showing picture of her 50 year old sister's grave buried there. I am sure family members who are living have relatives deceased. Yea the family members still living should go clean up the area to make it better.
They are not forgotten...they had their names spoken .By you . They still live as long as your video exists and we hear and see these hallowed grounds . So you give these folks life by doing this thank you
I agree completely! You die forever the last time someone speaks your name. He is assuring they still live by uncovering and reading their names aloud. It brings me to tears to watch him. He is doing sacred work.
When I saw the grave that an animal had dug under to make their home - As a lover of wildlife, I thought - perfect! I'd share my space with a critter - c'mon in!
19:11 - Interesting to see the picture with the headstone... it really brings it to reality that this once was a living person with a life story. I wonder what her life was like and how she passed...
@@anonz975 Times were harder back then plus they didn't have the medicine and technology that we do today to help people with illnesses etc so people died younger.
So, so, sad ! I also love to explore cemeteries. The saddest one is in our local cemetery "Here I lie as I lived. Alone....". Old Honest George Buchanan 70 years old 1817
@@chandracox6814 Maybe now. But I'd imagine back then with the lack of what we have now to entertain ourselves, a social life would be pretty beneficial for happiness.
As a child- I was taken to the 2family cemetery that were close , where my great and great family was buried. One on the grave sites ( with 4 or 5 ) gravestone had moss on them. Long story short- I want to go back and find them, clean them off and make them proud and not forgotten. But, I’m bedridden and will never see them again. These graveyards are in Rudyard, Michigan in the UP. I love these videos but I cry, we have lost our respect for our families that came before us!
You should carry clippers for the vines and brush, and a soft brush (such as brush used with a dustpan) to clear the stones without damage. Very interesting video.
I took my husband several years ago where my great grandma is buried, I was shocked! Everyone who had taken care of the cemetery through the years had passed away, and it was all covered over by thorns and brush, it was sad to see😢
No offense but i think you can do what those everyone done before......i mean your turn now if that was your great grandma you have a legacy not that hard to clean your ancestors grave.
UPDATE: 2/28/21 Shippey Cemetery is on the front page of the print edition of Columbus Ledger Enquirer and went online either Friday or yesterday on their site. It was a huge story that I thought was well written by reporters Nick Wooten and Mike Haskey. Check it out if you have a chance and thanks for all your comments. THANK YOU Robert & Cody for finding this place! There's already been 6 people that have sent me personal messages that read the story and are offering to join in the effort to clear and clean out the cemetery as well as other areas of expertise that can be contributed. It's all very urgently needed. I'm very humbled by the responses so far.
If you're in search of the owner of this Cemetery Land: Perhaps look for an obituary of a newer grave. If any survivors are still alive you could ask them who they arranged to have the burial with. Perhaps they can give a name of a funeral home. The funeral home maybe then lead you to who they contacted to make arrangements for burial on that property. Just a thought.
I totally agree with you. Cemeteries are for both the living and the dead. I love all cemeteries. They are so peaceful. I don't know if it's just me but even though you are in a cemetery next to a busy road somehow you can't hear the car's etc. And I love the fact that if you're in a cemetery alone you get that feeling your not alone. Wayne (From the U.K 🇬🇧)
What a special place, burials as recently as 1980..whoa!!! The trees that are covering are young. I suspect that this cemetery had caretakers for a while, and after they passed away, none of the younger descendents took an interest. That was the story in my family as well. Thank you for showing this place!♥️
Looks like a well to me...picture an old school hand pump that folks could use for flowers, etc. Our local National Cemetery has them to this day. God bless the forgotten...very sad.
As a Viet Nam Veteran and watching your videos I sense your frustration with respect for those who have gone before us. I really appreciate your efforts. I got hooked on genealogy from one of my uncles and have researched my families. I've done my share of roaming cemeteries. I never knew there were so many abandoned cemeteries until I started watching your videos.
Thank you for sharing this. Imagine a beautifully kept cemetery, which this one once was. But then the funding runs out, no one is left to take care of it or wants to, and it all grows over. This one is clearly beyond all hope. Countless cemeteries here in the US are also growing over and forgotten. May these souls rest in peace.
When I was a kid on weekends we would go to old grave yards in N/E Missouri and N/W Iowa looking up our old family graves. They were spread over 4 or 5 different counties... We had a very large past family. Each of your way back great, great,& 3X's great grandmothers had 13 to 20 kids many of thee kids died before they were 5 years old. But the ones that lived married young like 15 years old and started popping out kids they all had very large families... That's just the way it was back then because few kids lived past 12 years of age we found out going through the Cemeteries over the years... Great video thanks for sharing it... Be blessed... BBE
We did the same thing in Germany. We grew up going from graveyard to graveyard while my dad did family research. Luckily German cemetaries have playgrounds in them.
Antibiotics and a lot of vaccines weren't discovered and used till around the middle 1900s. That is the reason for the high children's mortality rates.
Robert and Cody, your videos are very informative but melancholy at the same time. Every grave encapsulated stories and their era. For myself, as a living member of my family i must constantly visit my deceased love ones so their memories continue to live on ... regards from Brunei 💕
This cemetery is in the same state of disarray as others across the country. If you contact your county recorders office, then can tell you who owns the land it's on and who managed the cemetery. You can then share your video with your board of supervisors or commissioners, civic organizations, the local VFW and other veterans organizations. That's how you go about getting the cemetery cleaned up and taken care of. In rural Oregon there was one like this, we got the local Boy Scouts to clean it up and it's a yearly project.
Thanks for putting the word out. I hope that what he says he cares, that he will take into consideration the information given. It would be great to see that someone cares enough to make a change. What it would look like after it's cleaned up, with respect for those gone on before us. I know I definitely wouldn't want my son who served, for his to look like this even after the rest of his family has passed. Thank you for your service and blessings to you
Wow! That is one excellent quality video. I loved that tour!! Thanks for posting it. As sad as it seems for a graveyard to be in such disrepair (especially since it's not THAT old - the 70's are hardly ancient history), it's so peaceful and beautiful there, I can't imagine the occupants don't enjoy it. I loved that there was hardly any trash and no notable vandalism. It's a place that appears to have respect, if not upkeep. My guess is the heavy erosion makes it near-impossible for upkeep, but I seriously think it's rather elegant the way it is.
@@daleellison6759 I used to love going a local cemetery late at night and just take in the essence. It was the most peaceful experience. Maybe one day I'll haul myself out there to do that again.
After generations, people don’t even know who they were or little about them. I actually did some research on my mothers family (couldn’t find much on my fathers side) and found out my great great grandfather was a civil war vet and served under Grant and then Sherman on his march to the sea. I’m 67 years old and never knew anything about him. I found his grave and cleaned it up. Those veterans should have a flag on their grave and someone should notify the local VFW
Our lives get so full and busy the past seams to melt away..thank you for sharing this peaceful trek through time.would love to see the graves cleared off. Hopefully somewhere there is a listing of all .
What a kind and generous man you are! Thank you for visiting those folks, speaking their names and caring about what happens to them. God bless you sir. It is sad to think that some may have been washed away.
What a wonderful idea! Maybe a community service group could come and clean up, do some research. Heartbreaking to see all of these loved ones forgotten. Each one of these folks was someone’s loved one❤️
Thank you for posting these videos because when these cemeteries are long gone people in the future will still able to get an idea of what they looked like!!
I love old cemeteries big time -- I loved doing genealogy since I was 12 years old, when my Cherokee/Pennsylvania Deutsch Grandfather past way in 1976 ! I love investigating old bury grounds, especially like your exploring there ! I know of all my relatives way back to Germany, England, Scottish, Ireland, Cherokee Nation Relatives from doing research since age 12. Awesome Stuff !
who's "they"? if its private and all the families have passed , no one can keep up with it. Judging the ground, it appears that land has flooded before (like badly flooded, that didn't go away for a while)
@@coffeehigh420 It's a TERRIBLE thing that descendents don't show the initiative to come together and maintain the grounds! How sad and cruel to be forgotten. We all make choices and it is evident that the descendants have made theirs.
Every time I see a tomb stone with a picture like on Alva's, makes me think things like "who is she/he as a person" or "what kind of life he/she have before he/she left the world". Its similar to my grandparents tombstone who have the same thing as hers except that they are in one tombstone. They are closest to me when I was a kid, they died when I was six years old and I don't have any idea what is happening 'cause no one explains it in my family to me that time. Now I'm in my 30s, I terribly miss them so much.
Did you ever come to a conclusion about the cemented hole? I was thinking it could be an outhouse site. The hole is elongated like outhouse sites here in kansas that i have seen, one of which is on my family's farm.
So very sad indeed. I live in the coastal area of NC and so many family farms had grave sites on their property. When all the family had died off and the farm sold the graves were forgotten and grown over by vegetation. It breaks my heart. Thank you for saying the names of the deceased.
I'm in the Foothills of NC. Many adventures have taken me up into The Appalachian Mtns looking for old homesteads. Finding an old homestead almost always results in finding forgotten family graves. Families buried family members on their property instead of church plots. It truly is sad that after a short period of time ppl are forgotten.
I grew up in coastal NC, and we had a small family graveyard too. I helped take care of it until I went to college and it got overgrown. I felt bad about that but am unable to clear it since a tornado came and knocked down a 100+ year old Oak tree whose trunk is easily 8 feet wide, so I uploaded the images to findagrave.com in case anybody still cares. www.findagrave.com/cemetery/47769/memorial-search?page=1#sr-179187294
@@amberdawn2601 hey there that was nice of you to have added them to find a grave...I have doing my family tree and I think I have some umplett in my family. Not sure if this one is one of them but I'm sure gonna look... you know where Gates county is?
I am 59 years old now. When I was very young maybe 8 or 9 years old my fathers parents lived in a three room shack in rural North Carolina. They didn't have running water but had a well in the back yard. I remember every time we went to visit running and drawing some water from that well. It was always very cold. There was a cemetery on a hill about 50 yards away from the house. On one visit I was drinking from the cup my Grandfather had on a rope at the well when my father walked up. He said boy don't you know that water ran in that well off them dead folks up that hill. I never drank from that well again.
That appears to be an Old Spring head! It was probably getting the ground real wet & they needed that area for burying people so they dug it out & put concrete around it. Where the concrete slab was would’ve been to keep debris people & animals from falling in. The hole in it most likely was an old wooden box like a lot of old wells was & they had it where the hole was & fixed so you could draw water from it maybe with an old crank wheel to pull a bucket up. Then all that rotted & fell down into the spring! The dirt pile you saw was most likely where they dug this spring head up & discarded the dirt. They then made a concrete top & the wooden box to draw water from it. There could’ve been an old old church there close & they used that water also. But I’m gonna assume that the spring head kept that ground wet so they dug it out & made a way to cover it & also get water from it to utilize that ground for burial plots after getn rid of the wet ground from the spring. That’s most likely what they done in my opinion.
I have also thought the phrase of dying twice was very sad. I really enjoyed this video. I love exploring these forgotten cemeteries and it makes me kind of happy to know at least someone visited them one more time. You can only imagine the fascinating stories their lives may have been.
As sad and forgotten as these graves are we must remember....graves and tombstones are for the living, a place to come and place flowers, show respect and reflect on the past. The dead are dead....ashes to ashes, dust to dust.
Its sad that this has been so forgotten and neglected. My grandmother use to say, a forgotten grave is such a shameful thing. I find it so sad, that some of the younger generation don't even care. Even tho its only the body that remains, the soul isnt there ! Wow what do people think death is. . No such thing as purgetory ???? its the idea of showing some respect for their life lived & Remembering ! Thanks for sharing. Alva Mae Hawkins was born the same year my mother was born, 1919 Gone but never forgotten.
Thank you for this video. I wish I lived near there I would gather people to help clear it. I like your saying people die twice, when they first enter the grave and when their name is forgotten and unspoken. Thank you so much. Enjoy all of your videos.
UPDATE: 5 /18/20 Back in early March Col. Hutch and I met with two reporters Mike Haskey and Nick Wooten for the Columbus Ledger Enquirer our newspaper here in Columbus, Ga. to do a story on Shippey. Mike Haskey did a video of the interview that would be posted to the Ledgers web site for viewing. The story was slated to run the following week when the Coronavirus overtook the news everywhere and the story got shelved. This was going to be the launch pad to bring together anyone who wanted to volunteer to help in the reclaiming of Shippey as well as starting a Go Fund Me account for any monetary donations for anyone anywhere in the world that may want to give whatever they can to help pay for the cleanup. I have a list of professions and expertise that people can help other than cutting and clearing the cemetery. Back in January and February Robert and Cody met up with Col. Hutch and I at Shippey and he made three or four update videos. They're on his channel here if you want to check them out. since the Coronavirus scrubbed the launch of the Friends of Shippey and the cleanup effort, we've had to go back to cutting and clearing as best we can for now. I've been working on the driveway and now have it almost clear and ready. It's going to take a tree service to remove some trees at the entrance coming off the main road and a front end loader to push out the dirt mounds on the sides and some other debris that currently block the entrance. If anyone is interested in seeing the list I made up of the services we'll be needing, I can post it here. Everyone can contribute something to this massive project if they chose to do so, for it's going to take the effort of us all to give the dignity and respect back to this cemetery and the people buried there that's rightfully deserved. WE CAN HANDLE IT! My sincere thanks to all of you who help make this happen. Dan Bruner
I find it so fascinating to think about; they all once lived, once loved, once had job, had kids, had a husband/wife. And now they’re all in the earth, mostly forgotten. 😢😩 shout out to all the people who go to visit graves especially the forgotten ones.
it's so sad that cemeteries like this end up like that, my heart goes out to each & every one of those beautiful souls. if i won the lottery or anything like that, i would have came to that cemetery & gave them each a beautiful bouquet of flowers to make them feel loved & remembered
This video made me both sad and angry. ALL graveyards should be looked after no matter how old. Here in the U.K they have groups called "Friends of " then the name of the graveyard. And they look after it making sure it's tidy and in good condition. The other thing that makes me so sad is those that are forgotten. Yes sometimes it's because the family blood line is finished but most of the time it's because once they are buried that's it, no one cares. I just hope that doesn't happen with me when I'm called. Thank you for posting this video. It shows that YOU care. And that my friend is outstanding. Wayne (From the U.K 🇬🇧)
@@apachewolf1132 Hi. We have groups like this all over the U.K especially in rural areas. After looking into it I found out there isn't one in the area I live so I've set one up. Maybe you could do you same. Talk to your local padre first and go from there. I hope you do manage to set a group up, it's very self rewarding. Wayne (from the U.K. 🇬🇧)
@@waynejfoster9860 Thank you Wayne, as a matter of fact I will be discussing this matter with some members of the community and see what can be done in organizing a group that will work in helping to keep the forgotten ones memory alive. I'm glad to hear that wonderful people such as yourself take the time to honor the departed. Great to hear from you my friend.
@@apachewolf1132 That's great 😃. I hope you get a good response. Not only does it keep memories alive and make cemeteries and headstones nice and tidy for all but it's also very rewarding and gives a great sense of community spirit. It's a great shame when graves and the deceased are sometimes forgotten. You will bring each person back to life if you know what I mean. If you need any advice please get back to me and also please let me know if you get a good response from your community. Good luck and God bless you 😃. Wayne (from the U.K. 🇬🇧)
Thank you Wayne, you are an inspiration to all . Likewise, if I can be of any assistance please let me know. God bless you my friend and all your colleagues