Grave markers found during association are a mystery
About 50 feet from a building, a vast mill stranded out from a ground, hardly conspicuous given a unwashed white tone scarcely blended in with a tiny white and gray stones around it. Once a initial mill was pulled from where it had sunk into a dirt, another was found nearby.
Shortly thereafter, James Cain, co-owner of Atlas Supply, was called outside. He walked behind a building to find what looked like dual headstones, or grave markers, clearly forsaken from a sky.
Or literally dropped, if Cain’s speculation that they were placed there by a Apr 27 hurricane is correct.
The dual pieces of white slab are scarcely a same height, about
2 inches thick and weighing about 30 pounds, Cain said.
Both are broken, blank pieces from their tip and bottom. Cain assumes they are dual apart headstones given a breaks don’t utterly compare up, and if they did, it would make for an abnormally high headstone.
They could find no essay on one, while a other hold an marker with no name. “Died 26th Nov., 1817” and usually below, “Aged 12 Days.”
“It kind of gives we chills,” Cain said. “You feel care for a family that mislaid a baby that young. But you’re also extraordinary about it in a chronological clarity and we wish to find a story behind it.”
But where did a headstones come from? The area where a headstones were found is fenced in, usually open to employees of a business on weekdays, Cain said.
Cain combined that a headstones weren’t there when a association was pouring concrete in a gated area in Feb and March.
“Had they been there, we would unequivocally have detected them then,” he said.
That left usually one answer in Cain’s mind.
“The hurricane forsaken it here,” he said. “That was a evident thought. This is a fenced-in area. It’s usually open 5 business days a week. Either somebody dumped them in there between Mar and now or a hurricane forsaken them there.”
After doing a bit of discerning investigate on Google Earth, Cain pronounced his business sits about 2,000 feet from where a Apr 27 hurricane crossed Interstate 359 and Greensboro Avenue.
“We had some breeze repairs and limbs blown down and some propane cylinders scattered,” he said. “We were positively unequivocally propitious that it didn’t cranky a half mile to a south.”
Cain emailed cinema of a headstones to ABC 33/40 meteorologist James Spann to see what he suspicion about his hurricane theory.
“I suspicion that was intensely interesting, and we would adore to know a answer myself,” Spann wrote in an email. “I haven’t unequivocally commented on it given we haven’t seen all myself. Just a pictures. Quite a mystery.”
Cain sent a cinema to Tuscaloosa County Emergency Management Agency Director David Hartin, as well. Cain pronounced Hartin told him that a hurricane could have carried a headstones from Chapel Road Cemetery in Fosters.
“The hurricane took a approach strike there,” Cain said. “He told me that a character of a headstones and a artwork character on them led to that guess.”
But Cain pronounced he’s still anything though certain about where a headstones came from and whom they go to.
“It had to have been a rich family behind in 1817 to commemorate an tot with such a large stone. So we’d usually like to lapse them to where they belong,” he said.
“Of march we still have a oddity of how did it get where it is. If it’s a tornado, that usually shows we a energy of these things to collect adult something that complicated with that small aspect area.”
Anyone with information about a headstones can call Atlas Welding Supply Co. Monday-
Friday during 205-345-6903.
Reach Wayne Grayson during wayne.grayson@tuscaloosanews.com or 205-722-0209.
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September 26th, 2011 | by roofing contractor |
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