Mark the Master Taphophile
- Member for
- 2 years 26 days
- Find a Grave ID
Bio
IMHO, over time, the street names, even the street numbers of our ancestors can change and their homes can be demolished and replaced. But one thing always remains the same – the cemetery where they were buried and the actual plot location even if the headstone may have crumbled or disappeared. And the cemeteries, or more specifically, the headstones and sometimes bare plots, are a confirmed link with the past – you know that many of your ancestors and relatives would have attended the burial or visited the grave afterwards, "leaving" their DNA on the very spot you stand on whenever you pay them a visit.
IMHO, over time, the street names, even the street numbers of our ancestors can change and their homes can be demolished and replaced. But one thing always remains the same – the cemetery where they were buried and the actual plot location even if the headstone may have crumbled or disappeared. And the cemeteries, or more specifically, the headstones and sometimes bare plots, are a confirmed link with the past – you know that many of your ancestors and relatives would have attended the burial or visited the grave afterwards, "leaving" their DNA on the very spot you stand on whenever you pay them a visit.
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