Vandalized and Haunting | Civil War Plantation Cemetery

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  • Опубліковано 14 січ 2020
  • A really interesting part of history hidden away in a modern neighborhood.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 857

  • @AdventuresIntoHistory
    @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +74

    Lotta history here guys! Check out these links to learn a little more.....
    www.findagrave.com/memorial/22783690/raphael-jacob-moses
    www.myjewishlearning.com/southern-and-jewish/wrestling-with-history-in-an-old-cemetery/
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    • @violet4509
      @violet4509 4 роки тому +4

      Please add these people to Find A Grave. Only one person appears there.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +3

      There is definitely more than one on there.

    • @terrygabrich4806
      @terrygabrich4806 4 роки тому +2

      So Moses was a Jew. Well that makes sense. The slave owners were either blacks or Jews. Very few white people owned any slaves. In fact, the first slaves in America were white not black.

    • @LIBICU812
      @LIBICU812 4 роки тому +5

      @@terrygabrich4806 Not exactly true. About 80% of the whites who journeyed here from England mutually agreed with the landowners and ship owners to become "indentured servants" for a finite time in order to pay off their costs for relocating to the "New England". My ancestors were such folks in 1650 (Essex Co., Virginia tobacco fields) then later in the 1700's-1800's were slave owners.

    • @sylviayoung1901
      @sylviayoung1901 4 роки тому +5

      My family is from Reidsville in Tattnall County. There is The old Tippins graveyard, Tippins lake and the Old Tippins Farmhouse. I am a Tippins but I'm way out here in Farmington NM. Could you film it and find out what history you can? I believe there was or is a Tippins Bank there also. I'm literally an orphan and it would mean so much to me. Thank You.

  • @jamescardwell2986
    @jamescardwell2986 4 роки тому +18

    Happened across this video surfing UA-cam, and was surprised they allowed it to be shown. It’s nice to see Southern History, and as you pointed out the Man was Jewish and a Confederate. Natives, Italians , Irish all answered the call when the States succeeded. I have a Grandfather who was a man of color and a Confederate. And most interesting is you being in Georgia, I had a very Great Grandfather that once owned a Plantation in Savanna. Again it’s nice to see Confederate History, due to political correctness and misconceptions put in place by Obama many will not nor address this period in History or their Confederate ancestry.

  • @ritamccartt-kordon283
    @ritamccartt-kordon283 4 роки тому +16

    I know of many Cemeteries that have been vandalized in our area of TN. One is my own family's Cemetery. A young boy, mad at someone, shot one of the tombstones of one of our oldest graves. Stones have been pushed over, broken and painted. Veteran's markers were stolen and sold for scrap metal.
    PEOPLE are responsible for TEACHING their children RESPECT!! When you neglect manners and respect, the children are SHORTCHANGED!!

  • @sesquashtwo
    @sesquashtwo 4 роки тому +70

    You are a Grave Whisperer! You perform a wonderful thing...speaking the names of the departed out-loud, brings that person, back to 'life'...for the trees remember the names after you leave.... God Bless!

    • @smc130
      @smc130 4 роки тому +7

      Joe Blow .... What you said gives me chills! Awesome!

    • @branwen8009
      @branwen8009 11 місяців тому

      So beautifully said.TU

  • @kylied932
    @kylied932 4 роки тому +113

    I love the inscriptions they used back then, I’m so glad that you take the time to read them. Just fascinating.

    • @latriciachapman7176
      @latriciachapman7176 3 роки тому +2

      Yes...I get a lot of enjoyment 👀 cause it's nice to know there are still wonderful people in the world ..

  • @lisaw7633
    @lisaw7633 4 роки тому +20

    A person that likes old cemeteries is called a taphophile. Every tombstone represents someone's life and the curiosity of it all. One of my favorite is the one in Savannah, GA and New Orleans

    • @christhomas6199
      @christhomas6199 2 роки тому +4

      Well I’m one of those people. I didn’t even know there was a name for it. That’s awesome thanks for the info

  • @atldon
    @atldon 4 роки тому +142

    My parents live only a few blocks from this cemetery. I had NO IDEA it was there.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +13

      Oh wow!

    • @whathappenedtomyYThandle
      @whathappenedtomyYThandle 4 роки тому +7

      The City or County knows it's there because there's a sign with hours although faded and a plat # in one of the comments www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2239006/moses-cemetery-on-esqiline-hill / 12:04 The graves of Eliza & Raphael Moses . . . "the black section of the private cemetery on Esquiline Hill is just a few feet away" . . . bit.ly/2RTPYSe Maybe someone local can dig into it further and if nobody maintaining it, get it secured and can do more research. A lot of info out there would be interesting to read. archives.columbusstate.edu/findingaids/mc57.php

    • @jitaamesuluma9730
      @jitaamesuluma9730 4 роки тому +5

      you need to walk more my dear hahahahaha , i found things here in england long forgotten , i wish i could do that there because some of my ancestors were from the south ,tennessee georgia and the carolinas, i am considered multi racial , guess some think i look white , here they did not , well now they look at me like they not sure , coz like usa what is white is changing

    • @jitaamesuluma9730
      @jitaamesuluma9730 4 роки тому +5

      i have seen some in every state in the south but this is where dna says oh and Oklahoma

    • @carlottachrist4060
      @carlottachrist4060 4 роки тому +1

      Wish i did I would have to go see it

  • @davezepnick1161
    @davezepnick1161 4 роки тому +125

    Thank you for caring about these abandon cemeteries, it is so sad to see the vandalism , my autistic son enjoys watching your videos very very much. We have actually have gone out and put USA flags on veterans graves that have been ignored ourselves . Keep up the good work guys

    • @yaelrar.4460
      @yaelrar.4460 4 роки тому +6

      God bless you. That's an awesome gesture!

    • @smc130
      @smc130 4 роки тому +8

      Dave Zepnick That is such a caring thing for you and your son to do. I’m sure he really looks forward to those visits. Good for you. You’re a fine dad!

    • @forgottenfilmchannel1194
      @forgottenfilmchannel1194 2 роки тому

      What a great way to show respect to the forgotten. I hope you and your son are still doing it!

  • @jamesross184
    @jamesross184 4 роки тому +289

    It's a disgrace that people have vandalised historic places like that. How would they feel if their grave was destroyed. I hate people like that don't have an ounce of respect

    • @dariusketchup4781
      @dariusketchup4781 4 роки тому +15

      James Ross Nope, no freakin respect at all, and no soul either.

    • @mattnewhouse1781
      @mattnewhouse1781 4 роки тому +12

      Desecration of graves is disgusting, you can find places in poland where graves stones have been stolen and used to patch up barns and houses. There must be such a difference in morality between the cultures.

    • @marka6187
      @marka6187 4 роки тому +7

      Just spoiled kids with nothing to do.

    • @michaelratliff905
      @michaelratliff905 4 роки тому +1

      @ are you one? you sure dumb enough, with a moronic statement like that...😂LMAO!!...

    • @kejuansallad
      @kejuansallad 4 роки тому +2

      Lol James that could be why they vandalized it....but the one where there scratches on a child grave It don't seem like it human made

  • @cbigb1000
    @cbigb1000 4 роки тому +91

    I hope more younger folks watch your vids so they can can experience our history and understand their mortality.

    • @punipuk8507
      @punipuk8507 4 роки тому +4

      Thank you Thum, Alaskan Eskimo enraptured with this video.
      Adopted folks from 1914 Pulaski county Ark, with a few very intriguing stories. Her grandfather from sharecropper plantation era, said the Black families and her relatives worked together for the whole. It seemed like life on the moon comparatively to Alaska. Living breathing history, precariously gone but for the efforts of these kind gentlemen and their such respectful approach to this cemetery. The area in general having gone to 'housing seed', is, to me, a tragic loss.

    • @dramanot
      @dramanot 4 роки тому +1

      Adults also

  • @SueGirling68
    @SueGirling68 4 роки тому +91

    Hi Robert, on the stone you needed to get the torch for that word I believe is "Sepulchral sod", then it's "Let faith exalt thy mind", then it's "In death God's delegate to see. Who will the severed bind ". You pronounce Montefiore - Monty fee or ray. The person who you had to move the 2 stones apart it said "For piety and patriotic devotion". A very well kept cemetery really apart from the obvious vandalism, thank you for taking us along. x

    • @SueGirling68
      @SueGirling68 4 роки тому +1

      @Eva Ivy Very true, the sunlight can be very playful when we are trying to see or read something. x

    • @punipuk8507
      @punipuk8507 4 роки тому +4

      Thank you Sue!
      ..anyone read Hebrew?

    • @elizabethm6657
      @elizabethm6657 2 роки тому +2

      Interesting. Montefiore Cemetery is a Jewish cemetery in Philadelphia, where my great grandparents and great great grandparents and many other ancestors are buried.

    • @esterherschkovich6499
      @esterherschkovich6499 2 роки тому

      @@punipuk8507 I read Hebrew..

  • @donhill3rd
    @donhill3rd 4 роки тому +67

    Deborah Moses born 1776 wow !!

  • @rosiegill577
    @rosiegill577 4 роки тому +61

    I love when you read the headstones to us. There are so many amazing messages. Keep up the good work and always keep your kind heart... God bless all of you!

  • @josephtrockel4962
    @josephtrockel4962 4 роки тому +23

    As a Judeo Christian I must say you are praised in Heaven for respecting the people that were laid to rest in that tiny place. Bless you friend!

  • @kimberlyg5887
    @kimberlyg5887 4 роки тому +32

    I’ve heard it read by you on your channel many times but the words still catch my ear “the Confederate States of America”. Fascinates me still. TY 🙏🏻🇺🇸✌🏻❤️

  • @melaniew4354
    @melaniew4354 4 роки тому +22

    I really enjoyed this! I'm a Georgia Girl born 'n bred. Back in 1970-71 when my father was in Vietnam, he was stationed at Fort Benning (we were lucky to be in our home state) and we lived in this Benning Hills neighborhood. I was only 5-6 years old, but I recall walking home from 1st grade at Benning Hills Elementary school. It was a different time when even that young kids could roam freely, and some of those houses look so familiar. I remember riding bikes and running down a hill from a German shepherd that bit me (still have the scar), so I likely played very near this site and didn't even know it.

  • @cherylnelson3554
    @cherylnelson3554 4 роки тому +38

    I would say that the plot of infants were probably either premature births, stillborn, or died immediately after birth. Do you ever find it disturbing to see so many children. As a mother who lost a daughter at birth I still cannot imagine the 💔 of those mothers and father's. We think we have trials and tribulations today. You do a wonderful job. Thank you.

    • @MegaLivingIt
      @MegaLivingIt 2 роки тому +3

      I think I read that babies and young children had high mortality rate with respiratory illness like flu, before the advent of common medicine like antibiotics, etc.

    • @sleekoduck
      @sleekoduck Рік тому

      Jewish families sometimes have Tay Sachs disease among babies. It's screened for in modern times, but it was a big killer of babies in those days.

  • @sandramoore8903
    @sandramoore8903 4 роки тому +29

    sepulchre : A Stone room with a stone coffin where your body lies. Means Burial Place.

  • @jonathanheussi1189
    @jonathanheussi1189 4 роки тому +28

    It would've been nice to see the footprint of the old house.

  • @monumentstosuffering2995
    @monumentstosuffering2995 4 роки тому +20

    How profound. As happened to countless grand plantations, the family has sold the plantation land until all that is left is these beautiful and fascinating records of American History. There should be better protection and even historical monument status.

  • @pamelalancaster3326
    @pamelalancaster3326 4 роки тому +10

    Thank you for being very respectful as you show these historical people. We have lost so much of our wonderful history of people especially the South.

  • @veggiemanmusic
    @veggiemanmusic 4 роки тому +47

    To many forgotten soldiers and warriors from the earlier wars. We need to give them credit.

    • @violetbrown2372
      @violetbrown2372 4 роки тому +12

      This is very true, whether you agreed with what the confederacy fought for or not, these were still Americans who fought and died for what they believed to be right, they are American veterans, and deserve to be given their rightful respect.

    • @yaelrar.4460
      @yaelrar.4460 4 роки тому +2

      Well said!

    • @violetbrown2372
      @violetbrown2372 4 роки тому +6

      @@yaelrar.4460 I am no fan of the confederacy, but as usual, the boys fighting that war were not politicians, just farm boys, protecting their homes, and what they believed to be right.

    • @TomF1F1Gameplaysandmore
      @TomF1F1Gameplaysandmore 3 роки тому +5

      @@violetbrown2372 just replying so late, but as an Australian I do really appreciate the respect you guys in the US give your fallen soldiers, even if they were fighting 'against freedom" in some cases of the confederacy.

  • @hawk6761
    @hawk6761 4 роки тому +57

    Its so sad. I cannot imagine losing 3 children! I lost a 2yr old son, and husband, but that would have done me in losing 3!

    • @jojosmojo1414
      @jojosmojo1414 4 роки тому +16

      So, so sorry for you loss Joyce. I was pregnant when my husband died in a car accident. My Dad told me that our Heavenly Father only gives us what he knows we can handle. Peace for you.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +14

      I am very sorry for your loses. ❤️

    • @jennywinters1374
      @jennywinters1374 4 роки тому +5

      I am so very sorry for your loss. I recently lost both my parents

    • @hawk6761
      @hawk6761 4 роки тому +4

      So sorry for ALL your losses

    • @OcotilloTom
      @OcotilloTom 4 роки тому +3

      Bless you Miss Joyce.

  • @tinasabat7303
    @tinasabat7303 4 роки тому +26

    I love going through cemeteries. Thank you for your videos. There's a lot of history in cemeteries. It's sad that people are so disrespectful to damage these headstones.

  • @jeniw8586
    @jeniw8586 4 роки тому +92

    So sad that there were so many infant graves.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +17

      That’s always so sad

    • @texasgina
      @texasgina 4 роки тому +18

      Its terrible. They didn’t have antibiotics and IV fluids. People in general died of things that are preventable now. When my descendants were leaving Alabama to Oklahoma for the indian allotted land, 2 of the toddlers died on the way on the train and are buried in an old family cemetery on the indian land we once owned. A lawyer owns it now and my cousin goes once a year and cleans it up

    • @LIBICU812
      @LIBICU812 4 роки тому +10

      Before vaccinations were invented and still even today some few choose to not vaccinate. The infant mortality rate was terribly great up until the 1950's. It was just a part of life back then and probably expected. That's one reason families were very large then because most of the children may not live past their teens.

    • @redpine8665
      @redpine8665 4 роки тому +12

      I sometimes see child siblings that died within days of each other, and I always wonder...did a sickness like smallpox go through the house? Was there a house fire and a child held on for a few more days than the other before passing? I always wonder what happened.

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 4 роки тому +8

      One word: mosquitoes. The slaves knew which plants to use to keep those pesky disease ridden bugs away but the white people thought they knew everything.

  • @rubenrubinos982
    @rubenrubinos982 4 роки тому +41

    This is what I was able to find on the name Montefiore usually a surname and not a first name. Montefiore is a surname associated with the Montefiore
    family, Sephardi Jews who were diplomats and bankers all over Europe
    and who originated from the Iberian Peninsula, namely Spain and
    Portugal, and also France, Morocco, England, and Italy. Meaning "flower
    mountain," its Ashkenazi equivalent would be "Blumberg."

  • @tsf5-productions
    @tsf5-productions 4 роки тому +23

    Respect...Honor...and, Love of the beloved small areas of Classic Southern sites - The "Side-Step Adventure" fellows have a strong need to share their findings.
    Thanks, guys, for your faithful work in these beautiful forgotten findings.

  • @keithmaxwell2169
    @keithmaxwell2169 4 роки тому +20

    I have found old graves out in the woods while hunting and usually the slave graves are only marked with regular stones the only proper headstones were of the owners of the plantations

  • @OZARKMEL
    @OZARKMEL 4 роки тому +23

    It's just so sad that people have to destroy these beautiful places of rest.

    • @valsedonia
      @valsedonia 4 роки тому +3

      OZARKMEL Vandals should have something very dear to them destroyed. Let the punishment *fit the crime.*

  • @stevebishop9468
    @stevebishop9468 4 роки тому +76

    It takes a truly depraved and pathetic individual to vandalize a cemetery...

    • @carlottachrist4060
      @carlottachrist4060 4 роки тому +3

      Amen brother

    • @suzieanderton4239
      @suzieanderton4239 4 роки тому +5

      Or a dumb insensitive juvenile

    • @jekyllhiding
      @jekyllhiding 4 роки тому +2

      @blackzed why would southerners who deny the confederates lost want to vandalize that cemetery

  • @greyferguson9319
    @greyferguson9319 4 роки тому +3

    I love to visit old cemeteries, they're quiet, peaceful and serene places...always interesting headstones and memorials...I am fond of the ones that look like tree trunks.

  • @SyriusStarMultimedia
    @SyriusStarMultimedia 4 роки тому +13

    Some of these people put in a lot of work to make sure many people didn’t have a marked grave. There are those of us that do not know who our Father’s father was and have no way of ever knowing. That is these people’s true legacy.

  • @southernman5839
    @southernman5839 4 роки тому +26

    It’s a shame that people destroy cemetery stones. No respect what so ever.

    • @southernman5839
      @southernman5839 4 роки тому +3

      I respect all those who were there during that time . It wasn’t easy for anybody.

  • @Butterfly54684
    @Butterfly54684 4 роки тому +13

    These are so interesting Guys and being a Brit I get to learn some of your histories...love it

  • @pamelac2863
    @pamelac2863 4 роки тому +23

    Really cool when you're exploring old cemeteries you tell people where you're at or where you're going how cool

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +4

      I do when I feel it is safe to reveal the location on this massive platform.

    • @dingmandingman
      @dingmandingman 4 роки тому

      @@AdventuresIntoHistory is this Columbus ga in Benning hills

    • @elizabethclover4
      @elizabethclover4 4 роки тому

      @@dingmandingman I believe it is because he mentions Columbus at some point in the beginning of the video.

  • @LIBICU812
    @LIBICU812 4 роки тому +50

    I found the poem: It is indeed from a Jewish hymnal. Here's the song in its entirety with the inscribed verse marked:
    The book is titled: Hymns written for the use of Hebrew Congregations
    Song 73:
    Affliction cometh not from dust,
    Nor trouble from the ground;
    But from a Source all-wise and just,
    A God with mercy crowned.
    The heavy hand from heaven came,
    That on thy heart is pressed;
    But, oh? remember 'tis the same
    By which thou oft art blessed.
    Hast thou, in looking o'er the list
    Of friends and kindred dear,
    The names of many loved and missed,
    That were but lately there?
    O, selfish mourner! weep no more
    For spirits disenthralled,
    For those who mortals were before,
    But now are angels called.
    ** Wouldst thou, who standest on the brink
    of the sepulchral sod,
    To suff'ring clay those souls relink
    That have escaped to God?
    Rather than lower these to thee,
    Let faith exalt thy mind,
    in death God's delegate to see,
    Who will the severed bind. **
    All terror from thy thought dismiss;
    For on His wings alone
    The righteous leave the grave's abyss,
    To reach their Father's throne.

  • @marthamann5234
    @marthamann5234 3 роки тому +2

    Thank you! My family go's back 150 plus in Florida. I check out the one stone of the 93 year old lady and learned some al the towns history. Thank again.

  • @sadiedayz2405
    @sadiedayz2405 4 роки тому +10

    How wonderful and interesting! His family all served with honor! Thank you!

  • @RagPlaysGames
    @RagPlaysGames 4 роки тому +38

    Montifiore pronounced: Mawn-teh-fee-ore-ay. Thanks for the video Robert.

    • @rosezingleman5007
      @rosezingleman5007 4 роки тому +1

      Rag Plays- Means “flowers of the mountain(s)” which is truly charming; it’s often a surname. I have a female cousin with this name whom we call “Monte”.

    • @josephtrockel4962
      @josephtrockel4962 4 роки тому +2

      I live in NY very close to the Montifiore Hospital Center in the N part of the city. You got it right EXCEPT for the "Ay"....leave that out altogether, not part of the pronunciation however you get an "A" for trying and being so respectful!

    • @RagPlaysGames
      @RagPlaysGames 4 роки тому +2

      @@josephtrockel4962 Thanks, but the "Ay" is part of the pronunciation, however it may be pronounced differently in New York. ua-cam.com/video/sPMSt3R6JQQ/v-deo.html

    • @leglier59
      @leglier59 4 роки тому +1

      Ok, now y'all......*G* You have to remember that different area's of the country and of the world will have or can have differnt pronunciations of a word or name. I am from the New Orleans area of Louisiana, now living in north Georgia. He says Levy as "Lev-vey". We pronounce it as "Lee-vie". THAT is one of the most simple examples I can come upwith... I will not go into how Georgians misspronounce (to me!) other words/names!!

  • @user-randi1987
    @user-randi1987 4 роки тому +13

    Very interesting cemetery, I like when you read the inscriptions on the headstones. Nice bit of history you added also. Thank you, Robert

  • @sid-hq9ib
    @sid-hq9ib 4 роки тому +23

    From Georgia, alot of the footage looks like where I grew upCovington, Georgia. My garndfather, father, my brother and me use to hunt the areas around and found many old cemetaries.
    You do a good job, keeep it up.

    • @thistlemoon1
      @thistlemoon1 4 роки тому +1

      sid5573 have you ever been to the military cemetery behind Oxford College? Last time I was there several years ago it was very well taken care of.

  • @325aliceI
    @325aliceI 4 роки тому +7

    It is beyond my comprehension how anyone could vandalize a cemetery.

    • @marcogram1216
      @marcogram1216 4 роки тому +4

      Well, according to Dr. Dutton, we no longer execute the degenerates of society. So, now they procreate and become all too commonplace.

  • @Cam-gk9ms
    @Cam-gk9ms 4 роки тому +2

    one of the best and most underrated channels on youtube

  • @belleange590
    @belleange590 4 роки тому +14

    That was awesome. I often wonder about people who lived to the mid part of the 1900's how much they must of seen change.

  • @beckyb.4592
    @beckyb.4592 4 роки тому +16

    Another great video! I really like these old cemeteries but it is so sad to see the babies graves. Chances are they died of things that would be easily cured today. But I do love American history. Thanks for what you do!

    • @tinawelch3005
      @tinawelch3005 4 роки тому +2

      The mother, Rose, must be have been in a weekened state. She never had time to recover from one pregnancy before she was pregnant again. Her husband, the surgeon, doubtless did his best to care for her in a time that offered only one form of birth control.

  • @IrishAnnie
    @IrishAnnie 4 роки тому +14

    I love the reclining child monument. So lovely.....

  • @michaelratliff905
    @michaelratliff905 4 роки тому +28

    The desecration of One of the 20 Million people who worked, loved ,lived and Died anywhere in this Country during that period of American history, deserves to be remembered with dignity, and respect...if I personally witness this,..I guarantee harsh, severe redress, for the effort...done Southern Style ☺

  • @CelticGem
    @CelticGem 4 роки тому +6

    Thanks for this one! I think its my favourite yet. Its hauntingly beautiful. (watching from the UK )

  • @ModupeAyodele
    @ModupeAyodele 4 роки тому +48

    Why would you vandalize a cemetery? I know religious reasons etc, regardless maybe they should think of their final resting place?? It is a disgrace. Great video full of forgotten history!!

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +14

      In this case the cemetery is in a high crime neighborhood.

    • @LIBICU812
      @LIBICU812 4 роки тому +6

      Back before smart phones and video games kids did other things to occupy their time. I wonder how much of the damage in any cemetery is recent?

    • @kayesdigginit1519
      @kayesdigginit1519 4 роки тому +5

      I agree, very disturbing and disgraceful 😔

    • @RagPlaysGames
      @RagPlaysGames 4 роки тому +5

      @@LIBICU812 The armbreak didn't look recent, the decap looked more so. Actually, looking closer at it, it might be covered in lichen. Could have happened a long time ago.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +4

      It was not within the past 5 years. That’s probably around the time I saw that cemetery for the first time. I think bored kids is most likely the exact answer for the vandalism.

  • @marypozzi3745
    @marypozzi3745 4 роки тому +8

    It’s very Sad that a person would desecrate a cemetery

    • @shirley9209
      @shirley9209 4 роки тому +1

      I don't understand why, knowing they too will occupy some day.

  • @RhettyforHistory
    @RhettyforHistory 4 роки тому +9

    Neat little cemetery and perfect time for a visit.

  • @minervasjourney
    @minervasjourney 4 роки тому +10

    Here in the Bronx, NY and Manhattan is a large Medical Hospital group with the Montefiore name, I wonder if they're related to their founders. I see one buried there is a surgeon. Thanks for the video, very lovely history for us all to preseve.

    • @63sonotech
      @63sonotech 3 роки тому +1

      Its not. The hospital in the bronx is names after Moses Montefiore.

    • @letsdothis9063
      @letsdothis9063 Рік тому +2

      @@63sonotech Did you notice that Moses is a family name here?

  • @kayesdigginit1519
    @kayesdigginit1519 4 роки тому +11

    Very very old cemetery by Georgia standards and Texas standards as well 👍 thank you for another interesting stop ☺

  • @thorfinthorfin3010
    @thorfinthorfin3010 2 роки тому +1

    We had a cemetery that was the final resting place for Revolutionary War soilders and militia and their sons who were Confederate Soldiers that had every stone broken with sledgehammers. A few WW1 , WW2, Korean and Vietnam Veterans also were destroyed. They singled out all the Veterans. One was born in 1739 and died creating this country. Great video Sir and I appreciate you reading the inscriptions for my old eyes.

  • @fairygrammy
    @fairygrammy 4 роки тому +18

    I really like how you have such respect for these old cemeteries. It is a shame that others don't show the same reverence by vadlening a sacred place.
    One thing you might try, coal or chalk rubbing of some of the harder to read headstones, you'd be surprised at how much that it pulls up onto to the paper. I do recommend using a heavy weight paper, and good quality coal or chalk, like you'd get from Micheals or other hobby stores. Just an idea I thought I'd throw out there at you....🙂🙂🧚🏼‍♀️

  • @marleneestabrook1999
    @marleneestabrook1999 4 роки тому +2

    sad to see people destroy such a sacred place thanks for taking me along

  • @catherinebolling7464
    @catherinebolling7464 3 роки тому +2

    When you have an inscription that's hard to read, you can take a can of shaving cream and rub it on the headstone and wipe off with the edge of a piece of cardboard. The print will stand out clearer. I learned this from people in my area who do grave research. I tried this myself and it works!!

  • @Shayna11NM
    @Shayna11NM 4 роки тому +4

    I think you did pretty well with the name Montefiore. It is said Mon-Tay-Fee-Or-Ay. It comes from a town in Italy per the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia. (By the way, I love taking walks in these historic cemeteries with you. Thank you for keeping their names from being forgotten to time. )

  • @evewilliams7629
    @evewilliams7629 4 роки тому +14

    Your friend standing by the fence at 22:38 almost made me jump out of my skin. 😂

  • @cemeterrihaynes4435
    @cemeterrihaynes4435 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much for reading all the stones. Very often you are reading names that have not been recorded in cemetery transcriptions and are providing invaluable information for family genealogists. Your time is not going to waste. Many of us appreciate you greatly. You’re preserving OUR family histories for generations to come.

  • @bettymooney883
    @bettymooney883 3 роки тому +1

    What a soothing, peaceful voice this fellow has. I have visited some European, British grave sites etc. Like this site thier is a lot of info on the stones. Often, the stones give the reason the person died. In Scotland there is a grave of two wee boys who drowned, one trying to save the other. One feels as though you know them. Thank you for your obvious respect for this piece of humanity.

  • @wendyderk1587
    @wendyderk1587 4 роки тому +4

    Thank you so much for reading the stones to us I just love the way they spoke and the way you read them back thanks love your vids 🙏😇💕

  • @smc130
    @smc130 4 роки тому +3

    Your videos are so well done. Thank you for the reverence and respect you’ve shown those buried there. I really think if I lived in one of the homes close to this cemetery I would do the research on the best way to clean these headstones. These people were loved and their markers deserve the best of care.

  • @gwendolynmcwilliams2020
    @gwendolynmcwilliams2020 2 роки тому

    Those words on Mr.Raphels and Ms. Elizas MOSES headstones that was LOVE . BEAUTIFUL

  • @yarnhappykim9294
    @yarnhappykim9294 4 роки тому +7

    Thank you so much for sharing the history of the cemetery and helping some family find their family 🙏 and it's a real shame that people would do that damage, please be safe out there and God bless you and your family and friends

  • @sharonfleming2729
    @sharonfleming2729 4 роки тому +8

    So sad about the children graves 😢 you always do a brilliant video e

  • @thra5herxb12s
    @thra5herxb12s 4 роки тому +3

    I wonder what was the connection to this place that made someone want to be laid to rest here in 1990.

  • @jawja100
    @jawja100 3 роки тому +1

    Thanks for sharing these videos. I've been researching my ancestry for abt 20 yrs, spend a lot of time in graveyards. Found many ancestors in GA, on their way to Florida Panhandle & farther. Have always loved history!

  • @dahatchery
    @dahatchery 4 роки тому +2

    Although I am from Hawaii, I know very well my immigrant English/Irish decent. I value this greatly for I know of many of my kin fought in the civil war and WW!. I value this to my bones. I too am a retired Navy veteran of the first Gulf war. I know my kin would have been proud.

  • @AVengefulSoul
    @AVengefulSoul 4 роки тому +1

    I loathe and despise people who vandalize and throw garbage in Cemeteries. The departed deserve respect just as much as we do.

  • @sheilac1845
    @sheilac1845 4 роки тому +5

    My Moma used to tell the story of the slaves loving their owners and often took the family name if they left...
    Not all slave owners were mean or cruel
    Hiddy from Tennessee 🌻👩‍🌾🇺🇸

    • @smc130
      @smc130 4 роки тому

      Sheila C ....Same here. My grandma told me that.

    • @lalablack6038
      @lalablack6038 4 роки тому

      I'm assuming that she white....

    • @shirley9209
      @shirley9209 4 роки тому +2

      They took their last name, so other people would know who they belong to.

  • @catherinetschasar5737
    @catherinetschasar5737 4 роки тому +5

    I love your videos and how very respectful you are 💕

  • @maryhead7615
    @maryhead7615 4 роки тому +1

    I appreciate the respect you show the graves you guide us through. These days there is little respect shown anyone, dead or alive. I've raised my children to show respect to people and situations they encounter in their daily lives. Now that I am unable to walk but a few steps at a time, I thoroughly enjoy watching the videos you do. In my younger days I enjoyed walking the grave yards of my family and their peers. Now that I can't do that, I live my past through your videos. Thank you for the enjoyment you provide for all of us. Mary Head

  • @marthakierstead3415
    @marthakierstead3415 4 роки тому +4

    So glad I found your channel. Love going on these adventures !

  • @flaminglaughter
    @flaminglaughter 4 роки тому +9

    Your most interesting cemetery yet!

  • @karencrawford4068
    @karencrawford4068 4 роки тому +10

    Way back when, if someone died a long distance away, family would errect a stone to preserve the memory if that person. There may well be no body in that plot. Having said that, the art of preservation of bodies was greatly enhanced during the Civil War. The Union surgeons learned to enbalm bodies. Then they were placed on trains and shipped home. At least some of them were. I expect that the cost was probably borne by the family so not all went home. I do not know of the history of this practice in the Confederate Army.

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +6

      I know of a Confederate soldier who died as a POW during the war and made it all the way back to a remote Georgia County.

  • @darrinmagnus1
    @darrinmagnus1 4 роки тому +8

    Anyone that would vandalize a cemetery regardless of who was buried there, even based on their ideological values, is a savage and doesn't deserve a headstone to identify them when they pass at the end of their days.

    • @jojowhi1296
      @jojowhi1296 4 роки тому +1

      Nothing in the cemetery looks vandalize wth are you talking about

    • @ulyssesdenice5071
      @ulyssesdenice5071 4 роки тому +1

      @@jojowhi1296 The statue in the beginning. Looks like someone had a go at the head and arm over there. And maybe the scratched headstone.

  • @ameliablackshaw5912
    @ameliablackshaw5912 Рік тому

    Thank you for caring about these abandon cemeteries, it is so sad to see the vandalism . I love your videos

  • @tonycevallos7513
    @tonycevallos7513 4 роки тому

    Thank you for the wonderful work you do in making these videos and the reverence you show at these peoples resting places. You truly are a beautiful soul. I look forward to seeing all your videos.

  • @hunglikehorse4339
    @hunglikehorse4339 4 роки тому

    Of all the channels I watch on YT, this is my favorite. You do a great job! My hats off to you

  • @pamelaoliver8442
    @pamelaoliver8442 4 роки тому +4

    Had to smile when I saw my hometown of Cincinnati on the stone. Ohio to Georgia is still quite a travel. Makes me wonder what he was doing here ❤

  • @susanbrewster2126
    @susanbrewster2126 3 роки тому

    I enjoy your videos so much. There is such history in the old cemeteries. Thank you for sharing your travels.

  • @marypearling1418
    @marypearling1418 3 роки тому

    I'm impressed that you find old cemeteries as fascinating as I do. I lived in Rainier, Oregon for 30 years and went out to a few of the very old ones some dating back to the late 1700s to early 1800s. Keep on doing what you do.

  • @shirleydenton4747
    @shirleydenton4747 4 роки тому

    Thank you so much for taking your time to read those epitaphs, and they can go for decades unnoticed and nobody caring.

  • @debbieblaylock9997
    @debbieblaylock9997 4 роки тому +3

    Awesome Cemetery all the history I really love your videos

  • @TS-bn7zt
    @TS-bn7zt 4 роки тому +3

    Just fantastic some of those inscriptions on those stones
    we're amazing, very touching indeed.
    Such a built up area now which I expect would have been quite isolated
    back in the day.
    Thanks for taking us there guys, many thanks.

  • @anthonybertone2336
    @anthonybertone2336 4 роки тому +6

    It really doesn’t matter if you say the name wrong at least you’re out there a cab train this video for all of us to enjoy that we all really appreciate very much thank you for all that you do

  • @melissadyche8325
    @melissadyche8325 2 роки тому

    Thank you again for showing this video Robert

  • @plymouthduster2252
    @plymouthduster2252 4 роки тому +1

    Great video love watching you explore old places

  • @israelrico8555
    @israelrico8555 4 роки тому +4

    Thank you Roberto nice video wonderful story

  • @rhonda5711
    @rhonda5711 4 роки тому +1

    Very interesting video. I luv when you read what's on the gravestones. So different to what is written these days. Thank-you for all the hard work you do to these forgotten cemeteries. Keep safe out there :)

  • @j2themac778
    @j2themac778 4 роки тому

    Another great adventure, thanks for taking us along.

  • @megancooper6718
    @megancooper6718 4 роки тому +6

    The small plot to the side with infant graves in it, is very common in old cemetaries. It is for still born babes that never took a breath and were not christened. Sadly it is said they are not recognised by god so they are buried separately on the side of or just outside of consecrated ground. This unconsecrated area was also for people that commited suicide or murder. Very sad.

    • @Hillcapper1
      @Hillcapper1 4 роки тому +1

      I’d have to take some exception to your comment. Christening whether in the sense of baptism or official naming of a child is not practiced typically by Baptists or Presbyterians which most of these folks in the south were (there were also some Lutherans but very few Catholics in this part of the south). Infant baptism is definitely not observed by these folks either, and the teaching that God only recognizes a child after baptism is not believed either. Coming from a Baptist background and my family going back 300 years in the south I know this to be true. You are correct in that stillborn or babies dying were not uncommon during this time. Some sources say that up to 25% of women died in child birth in the antebellum south also. Hard, sad times in many ways.

    • @megancooper6718
      @megancooper6718 4 роки тому +1

      @@Hillcapper1 you may take exception. I am speaking from my own knowledge of common customs.🙂

    • @alphonserobichaud1278
      @alphonserobichaud1278 Рік тому

      So sad, babies will go to heaven faster than us older people

  • @julieannwozniak2264
    @julieannwozniak2264 2 роки тому +2

    Greene County, PA. Ourr local graves are found and maintained by volunteers from the Historical Society. The stones in the cemetery here in Bobtown were mostly sandstone and were dissolve from exposure to the elements. Many have been digitized.

  • @craigb9489
    @craigb9489 4 роки тому

    Thank you Robert! You being history to everyone. It's very interesting and I hope informative to families of the deceased who are tracing family heritage and burial sites. Keep up the great discoveries.

  • @buttergirlist
    @buttergirlist 4 роки тому +40

    Slight error at 16.08 Rose J Moses 1841 died 1917 I am guessing. You said died 1817. on the stone it really looks like 1817 lol

    • @AdventuresIntoHistory
      @AdventuresIntoHistory  4 роки тому +9

      Good catch, I do that from time to time....

    • @billiejohoward7443
      @billiejohoward7443 4 роки тому +4

      And at 8:26 he says they died August 26 but it says October 26...😜 But it's ok. Still a great video and thanks again for the history lesson and taking time out of your day to remember these people!!!!💗💗💗

    • @lilacghost4214
      @lilacghost4214 4 роки тому +4

      I was so thrown off by that. I was like wait how

    • @roberleedodson
      @roberleedodson 4 роки тому +2

      @@AdventuresIntoHistory i saw the same thing lol

  • @Toltecgrl
    @Toltecgrl 4 роки тому

    Thank You! That was sooo interesting? Such history that you have in those States. I love your videos!! 👍

  • @kathiejaeschke1844
    @kathiejaeschke1844 3 роки тому

    I'm a history biff as well so I love that you are taking the time to find these lost graves. They deserve to be remembered no matter their station in life. Good luck on your continuing search.

  • @tonyasingleton2839
    @tonyasingleton2839 3 роки тому

    I love old cemeteries. Your videos are great. Glad i found them.

  • @carrieashley6465
    @carrieashley6465 4 роки тому +7

    This was pretty cool
    Pretty holly bush with berries still on it sad people little respect for other people family resting place