Posted on 06/25/2005 3:08:35 PM PDT by QwertyKPH
ALTON -- To the surprise of tree-cutters in Alton Cemetery, a 150-year-old ash revealed a secret it had kept inside its "heart" for possibly more than a century.
Jim Scroggins, 27, and Mark Brunetto, 31, both of Holiday Shores and owners of Holiday Tree and Landscape, discovered a limestone headstone dating to 1854 inside the 90-foot tree they were cutting down June 17.
As it grew slowly over the years, the tree enclosed the grave marker in its middle, surrounding it with wood and bark and eventually reaching a diameter of 4 feet. The growth process of the tree also raised the marker up about 4 feet above ground.
When Scroggins and Brunetto cut away at angles into the towering, hardwood ash, its middle was rotted into a soft reddish-brown matter. They were digging out the center when one of the men hit the headstone with the shovel.
"We could hear it," Brunetto said. "Obviously, it wasnt wood, and it was something hard."
He said he had no idea what could be inside the old tree, which was damaged during a windstorm June 9.
"I was hoping it was a box of money," Brunetto joked.
Instead, it was upper half of the headstone; the lower part was broken off. They also found two old bricks and a flowerpot that the growing tree had enveloped.
Both men said they were surprised at the find.
"I think it was intended to happen, from God," Scroggins said, noting that a hand with its index finger "pointing to heaven," as he described it, is carved on top of the stone. The grave marker has an arched top.
The men had spent nearly three days taking down the tree and removing the wood. A large stump remains on the site; cemetery records show two graves are under the stump. The men, who do landscaping and tree cutting, said they might come back and remove the stump, which may contain a headstone for the second grave.
Brunetto and Scroggins said they were excited to find the long-hidden grave marker. They said they never had encountered anything as interesting in their yearlong business partnership. They can be reached at 692-6115.
After finding the grave marker, the men said they mulled over calling The Telegraph for a week to report their discovery before Scroggins picked up the telephone. After getting Scroggins call, an editor called local history enthusiast Don Huber, who is president of the cemetery board.
The cemetery is between Fifth Street on the south and Union Street on the north between Vine and Pearl streets in the citys Hunterstown neighborhood.
Huber met the men Friday at Alton Cemetery, applied foamy shaving cream to the indentations carved into the stone and used a ruler to smooth the foam flush with the stone.
"It kind of makes it jump out at you," Huber said as the foam filled up the lettering.
The shaving cream immediately revealed that the gravestone belongs to Martha J. Mahan, who died Aug. 13, 1854. The adjoining grave is missing its marker, which still may be in the stump. It belongs to an apparent relative, Rebecca Mahan.
"I thought it was interesting. I love history," Huber said. "It was a miracle they found it. It was neat for the guys. They were excited about it. I am going to make sure it gets back where it belongs" on the grave.
Bette Flactiff, cemetery sexton, called the find "really remarkable."
"Its just so strange," she said. "Its real interesting. It certainly was a surprise."
Flactiff said the Mahans graves, in the northern part of the property, are in the older section of the cemetery. Neither Flactiff nor Huber had information about the Mahan family or their descendents.
The cemetery began recording burials in 1837, although board members believe bodies of people who died earlier than that may have been moved from their graves to Alton Cemetery.
lnweller@hotmail.com
maybe I missed it but what state is this?
Alton Illinois
Why are all of these interesting stories being moved to chat? I don't think I've ever seen so many stories moved to chat so quickly.
STAY AWAY FROM THE TREES!!!!
Maybe they don't think my news taste is worthy enough?
I thought it was a great story.
I just posted one about a 6 month old baby that died in a hot car that got moved to chat. What's up with that?
STAY OUT DA BUSHES! AND DA TREES!
"It kind of makes it jump out at you," Huber said as the foam filled up the lettering.
Interesting way to show the words - in relief.
Once there was a thriving coal mining industry in King County, but the mines played out, and the mining towns became ghost towns. When I was horseback riding through the ghost town of Franklin, I found myself riding through a grove with marble stones at the foot of trees, turned at all angles. I looked at one stone and realized I was looking at the headstone of a person who had died of typhoid in 1910. Other stones turned out to be headstones of people who had died in the same period in a typhoid epidemic.
It turned out that I was riding through the cemetery of the town of Franklin. Over the previous 80 years, the rain forest had reclaimed the cemetery, swallowing its gravestones -- and no doubt its bodies.
It was a sobering thought.
Interesting story. LOL!
What a great story! I love riding and I love going through old cemeteries but to unexpectedly ride through an old, lost cemetery, well, that is just too awesome. And the one you rode through had such historical significance, due to the typhoid epidemic. What an exciting discovery for you.
This truly is remarkable, particularly with that hand pointing toward the sky on the top of the marker. Really a wonderful, inspiring story.
I'd love to find out more about the two women buried there.
The growth process of the tree also raised the marker up about 4 feet above ground
I need a botany call made on this-If I am not mistaken, the growth process of a tree does not progress in this manner. I was always told that a mark on the side of a tree (for example) would remain at that same height no matter how tall the tree grew. Have I been spreading a lie all these years?
The tree grew "up" from, initially, beneath the markers, thus, raising the markers somewhat as the tree progressed upward.
I refer to "markers" because they write that there's another marker somewhere nearby that they haven't uncovered.
It might even be a case of the caskets of those buried there were made of green wood and they sprouted...or, perhaps also, there were seeds/branches among the flowers included with the deceased and those branches/flowers/seeds sprouted.
However, the point is that the tree began beneath the marker, and as the tree grew larger and upward, it grew first beneath the markers and then around them, raising the markers and encompassing them. Pretty beautiful story.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on, off, or alter the "Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list --
Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
The GGG Digest -- Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)
There is an old marker (1800's) in my church cemetery that's being "swallowed" by an ancient tree. Unfortunately, last winter, kids kicked what was showing of the marker outside the tree and broke it.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.