Mods, please move if this is posted in the wrong location.
The other day I was driving through southeastern Iowa to pick my wife up at the Des Moines airport and decided to stop in Agency, near Ottumwa, to see if I could find the grave of the man who was the subject of my masters thesis. In searching through the older section of the City Cemetery I found a couple of headstones, one of which I though would be of interest to this community, and another that I have questions as to the symbolism on the headstone.
The first headstone is that of Fletcher King, First Iowa Battery. Mr. King passed in the field, it appears, and the family brought the remains home and erected this very intricate and patriotic headstone. As I had not seen a private purchase stone like this before, I thought I would pass it along.
The second image posted is that of a woman's grave from the 1870s, I believe. I actually had a very hard time making out the engraving on the stone in person due to degradation from the elements. Her name was Harriet and was 32 at time of passing. What caught my eye were the pentacles/pentagrams (not sure of the correct terminology) near the top of the stone. I've had a hard time finding information about this type of decoration and was hoping someone on hear might know more about the use of this very unique style of decoration.
One final question: I noticed a grouping of military headstones clustered together in an area of the cemetary. There were approximately four to five stones for soldiers from the First Iowa Battery, some within inches of each other, all unrelated and placed near a family plot with a last name different from any of the soldiers. Removing for the moment the possibility that this is a case of slovenly maintenance by previous cemetery staff or good-intentioned people trying to restore headstones, could this be construed as some attempt at creating a "Soldier's Lot" grouping within the cemetary, even though there are dozens of veterans spread throughout the rest of the grounds? Another possiblity, and perhaps I'm reading too much into the close placement of the stones, but could it be that this was a grouping of stones placed in memory by the family for soldiers whose bodies were not brought back north? I hope the question is not too macabre, but as I stated, the close grouping of stones for soldiers related only by the unit they served in struck me, and I thought someone here might know more about this clustering.
My thanks.
The other day I was driving through southeastern Iowa to pick my wife up at the Des Moines airport and decided to stop in Agency, near Ottumwa, to see if I could find the grave of the man who was the subject of my masters thesis. In searching through the older section of the City Cemetery I found a couple of headstones, one of which I though would be of interest to this community, and another that I have questions as to the symbolism on the headstone.
The first headstone is that of Fletcher King, First Iowa Battery. Mr. King passed in the field, it appears, and the family brought the remains home and erected this very intricate and patriotic headstone. As I had not seen a private purchase stone like this before, I thought I would pass it along.
The second image posted is that of a woman's grave from the 1870s, I believe. I actually had a very hard time making out the engraving on the stone in person due to degradation from the elements. Her name was Harriet and was 32 at time of passing. What caught my eye were the pentacles/pentagrams (not sure of the correct terminology) near the top of the stone. I've had a hard time finding information about this type of decoration and was hoping someone on hear might know more about the use of this very unique style of decoration.
One final question: I noticed a grouping of military headstones clustered together in an area of the cemetary. There were approximately four to five stones for soldiers from the First Iowa Battery, some within inches of each other, all unrelated and placed near a family plot with a last name different from any of the soldiers. Removing for the moment the possibility that this is a case of slovenly maintenance by previous cemetery staff or good-intentioned people trying to restore headstones, could this be construed as some attempt at creating a "Soldier's Lot" grouping within the cemetary, even though there are dozens of veterans spread throughout the rest of the grounds? Another possiblity, and perhaps I'm reading too much into the close placement of the stones, but could it be that this was a grouping of stones placed in memory by the family for soldiers whose bodies were not brought back north? I hope the question is not too macabre, but as I stated, the close grouping of stones for soldiers related only by the unit they served in struck me, and I thought someone here might know more about this clustering.
My thanks.
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