Nacona Cemetery – Nacona Texas 76255

Nacona is a nice cemetery and I was surprised at the greenery.

Nacona Cemetery, Nacona, Texas
Nacona Cemetery, Nacona, Texas

Driving down route 82 just outside of Nacona, Texas, I passed a couple of great looking, small, dusty cemeteries with not a touch of grass around them. April winds blew sandy soil into small ripples and tombstones looked sandblasted from all the fine granular soil endlessly pelting them. One after another I passed these cemeteries vowing to stop at the next. I love these types of cemeteries.

Nacona Cemetery popped up on my GPS and I envisioned an old west cemetery similar to the ones I had already driven by. I was surprised at the greenery within the cemetery and the well manicured grass. The greenery is pleasing though I also enjoy cemeteries that allow the natural substrate to show through.

Nacona is still active and over 5200 people have been interred there. The graves are very well documented and the Nacona Cemetery website gives virtual visitors a tremendous amount of information of the burial sites. Well done.

Nacona Cemetery, Nacona Texas 76255
Nacona Cemetery Gravemarkers, Nacona, Texas

Evergreen Cemetery – Paris Texas

In Texas, even Jesus wears cowboy boots.

Evergreen Cemetery - Paris Texas
Evergreen Cemetery – Paris Texas

In Texas, even Jesus wears cowboy boots.
I have many fond memories of Texas but there are several that stand out as high points. First, you can drive down some two-lane roads at 75 MPH and people in front of you will ease onto the shoulder (while maintaining their speed) to let you pass. Second, the stars at night really are big and bright. Third, even Jesus wears cowboy boots.

I pulled into Paris Texas under an early evening sun with enough daylight left for a quick tour of Evergreen Cemetery. I had heard rumors that a cowboy boot wearing Jesus statue was a must see in this sprawling and very crowded cemetery. With eyes peeled I drove row after row of graveled streets looking at the base of every monolith. Cowboy boots, much less on Jesus’ feet, were nowhere to be seen.

Dusk approached quicker than I wanted and as I turned onto a seemingly perpetually long row of tombstones I caught the glimpse of a murky blurr. Was that Jesus, in cowboy boots, running through the darkening cemetery? No, it was a bobcat. I grabbed my camera and barreled out of the car in a mad dash to attempt a perfect snapshot of this beautiful bobcat darting amongst the rows of tombstones.

In un-Ansel Adams like fashion I ran at top speed with my camera outstretched toward the bobcat. Little did he realize I was hot on his trail and able to see his furry ears pointing above a tablet-styled tombstone behind which he sought refuge. With visions of O.J. Simpson dashing through airports and hurdling piles of luggage in those late 1970’s Samsonite commercials, my feet propelled me through the air to finally land directly in front of my prey.

Somewhere, in mid-air, I took an instantaneous moment to consider the fullness of my impending predicament. Here I was, in a darkening cemetery running crazily after a frightened wild animal capable of inflicting, if nothing else, deep and infectious lacerations to my limbs and torso. Ah, too late to think of the ramifications, I steadied my index finger on my camera’s shutter release in preparations of what was sure to be an amazing photograph of a beautiful healthy bobcat in front of a southwestern tombstone with a Texas sunset in the back ground. “This is going to be great. What if I am lucky enough to capture the moment when he leaps, claws outstretched, right in front of Jesus’ cowboy boots” I thought microseconds before landing.

Unfortunately, this bobcat’s perfect portrait was not meant to be as he became alert to my whisper-less flight and bolted an instant before my flashbulb illuminated the darkened cemetery.

bobcat_cemetery
Bobcat in a Cemetery

And with one blurry picture taken, the excitement was finished. Now my task of finding Jesus with cowboy boots and the other interesting grave markers of Evergreen Cemetery was before me.

Luckily, the Texas twilight gave me enough time to find Jesus’ cowboy boots and a few other very interesting markers. See the pictures below.

Nearby Attractions: Jaxx Burgers

State Line Cemetery – Texarkana Arkansas

Arkansas State Line Cemetery – Texarkana Arkansas
According to the sign on the entry gate, if you are over 8’3” tall you will have to mind your head when entering Arkansas State Line Cemetery.

State Line Cemetery - Woodlawn Cemetery - Texarkana Arkansas
State Line Cemetery – Texarkana Arkansas

Arkansas State Line Cemetery – Texarkana Arkansas
According to the sign on the entry gate, if you are over 8’3” tall you will have to mind your head when entering Arkansas State Line Cemetery. Fortunately, The Cemetery Detective is a couple feet (plus some) shy of this mark. State Line Cemetery is either also known as Woodlawn Cemetery or it directly borders Woodlawn Cemetery. Any readers who know the facts about the name of this cemetery are welcome to email me and I will set the record straight in this blog.

There are two particularly interesting tombstones within this cemetery that stood out. The first is a very detailed carving of a broken tree that adornes Abraham Parking’s tombstone.

The second carving is of a little girl with a missing arm that stands guard of Maggie Purifoy’s grave site and overlooks, with downcast eyes, visitors to her grave site.

Broken Tree Grave Marker Carving
Broken Tree – Similar to broken columns on other grave markers.
Maggie Purifoy's Grave Marker - Lace Dress, Bare Feet, and Chubby Legs
Maggie Purifoy’s Grave Marker – Lace Dress, Bare Feet, and Chubby Legs

Chinese Cemetery & Live Oak Cemetery – Greenville Mississippi

Chinese Cemetery and Live Oak Cemetery, Greenville Mississippi

Chinese Cemetery, Greenville Mississippi
Chinese Cemetery, Greenville Misssissippi

I am often intrigued by the differences between well maintained cemeteries and those that have fallen into disrepair. What factors contribute to one cemetery being neatly maintained versus another, in essentially the same location, being allowed to become over grown and strewn with litter?

While visiting Chinese Cemetery and Live Oak Cemetery in Greenville, MS I found these two adjacent cemeteries portrayed very different levels of maintenance. Both cemeteries where gated and fenced although Live Oak Cemetery had an open design that allowed for visitors 24 hours per day while the Chinese Cemetery’s gates were locked after official visiting hours and did not allow for visitors during the nighttime hours.

Chinese Cemetery displayed a distinct ethnic pride and all persons interred within the cemetery were of apparently similar ethnic heritage. Live Oak Cemetery did not appear to have a cultural reference other than to reflect the community, at large, surrounding it. While the community appeared to be socioeconomically depressed I do not find in my cemetery research, that socioeconomic status, by itself, directly correlates to the general upkeep of a cemetery. I have visited many well-kept cemeteries in many depressed neighborhoods.

Live Oak Cemetery, Greenville Mississippi
Live Oak Cemetery, Greenville Mississippi

Above and beyond willingness and ability to pay money to have entire cemeteries and individual gravesites maintained, community pride seems to be an important factor in general upkeep of a community cemetery as does a core group of concerned citizens who take it upon themselves to instill community pride in a well-kept cemetery. If I were to hypothisise, I would suppose that Chinese Cemetery is cared for by a close-knit community of friends and family members who have a continuing desire to honor the interred.

Conversely, Live Oak Cemetery might have recently lost their core group of close-knit members of the community who, in years past, took great pride in properly maintaining their family’s plots. Without an emphasis for the need of community involvement, a cemetery such as Live Oak Cemetery can quickly become overgrown and derelict.

With a small amount of community involvement, Live Oak Cemetery can quickly be turned around and become as well cared for as Chinese Cemetery in Greenville, Mississippi.

Nearby: Tamale Shop

Helm Cemetery – Shaw Mississippi

Helm Cemetery – Shaw Mississippi

Helm Cemetery - Shaw Mississippi
Helm Cemetery

Helm Cemetery – Shaw Mississippi. If spring warming had caused crop growth to be a few inches higher we would have never seen the cemetery on the horizon. We were driving down Highway 61 on a late April day and I dare say if our trip had been delayed until May we would have completely missed Helm Cemetery.

Like so many cemeteries we pass along the roadside, this Cemetery hides engulfed in a farmer’s field. It is appropriate though since many of these cemeteries are populated with farmers and sharecroppers of old.

We didn’t stay long. The muddy ground made for difficult foot navigation toward and through the cemetery.

Key Underwood Coon Dog Cemetery – Cherokee Alabama

The Coon Dog Cemetery tombstones and epitaphs will make any animal lover shed a tear.

Key Underwood Coon Dog Cemetery
Coon Dog Cemetery Sign

While I normally confine my cemetery research to those of the human variety, I can be easily lead astray when it comes to interesting cemeteries that do not contain human remains. When I heard of the Coon Dog Cemetery in Cherokee Alabama, my interest was immediately piqued. Coon Dog Cemetery? Seriously? I have visited several pet cemeteries but never an entire cemetery dedicated to one specific breed of dog.

“Alright, what the heck? This will be good for a quick laugh.” I thought as I drove Alabama’s secluded backwoods roads peering through my bug-splattered windshield for Coon Dog Cemetery Road. Maybe there will be two or three sticks in the ground marking a few crude burial sites where dog owners laid the remains of their hunting companions.

Well, I have to tell you I wasn’t laughing when I pulled into the Key Underwood Coon Dog Cemetery. There before me laid the remains of 185 beloved members of hunting families delicately honored with tombstones and epitaphs that could make any animal lover shed a tear.

There is:

Greasy’s Spot
Gypsy
Old Red
Squeek
Preacher
Hank
Daisy
Strait Talkn’ Tex
Blue Flash and Blue Flash Jr.
Tree Talkin’ Train
Papa
Lassie
So Blue Rocky
Bear
Beanblossom Bommer
Duke
Old Roy
Ranger
Ruff
High Pocket
Lulubelle
Doctor Doom
and, not to forget to mention, TROOP, the first coondog buried in the Coondog Cemetery on September 4, 1937.

Troop September 4, 1937
Troop – September 4, 1937

The Coon Dog Cemetery is only intended for the interment of “straight” coon dogs. That means, coon dogs that spend their pursuits of game other than Raccoons are not welcome. Does your dog run rabbit, squirrel, armadillo, or deer? Then your dog is not welcome here. Is your dog part chow, Labrador, Shepard, or (God forbid) poodle? Then you best bury it elsewhere.

Coon Dog Cemetery Overview
Coon Dog Cemetery Overview
Coon Dog Cemetery Marker
Coon Dog Cemetery Marker

Nearby Attraction: The Rattlesnake Saloon

How to get to the Coon Dog Cemetery:

Florence Cemetery – Florence Alabama

Florence Cemetery in Florence Alabama is the final resting place of Alabama Governors, a city Mayor, and an author or two.

Florence Cemetery - Florence Alabama
Florence Cemetery – Florence Alabama

Florence Cemetery in Florence Alabama is the final resting place of Alabama Governors, a city Mayor, and an author or two. Immediately outside the cemetery walls, 6 feet under busy Tennessee Street lies a cantankerous outlaw who claimed “no one will ever run over me.” City residents saw to it his claims would prove to be false as thousands of people run over him every single day.

I visited Florence Cemetery on a warm April day.  Though a brisk breeze blew, a bright Alabama sun beat down upon me.  The sun burns me quickly at the beginning of the summer season and I was thankful for the copious numbers of trees which shade much of the older portions of the cemetery.  Scattered throughout the grounds are groves of tall standing Juniper trees.  Cemetery maintenance workers expertly prune lower branches away from tombstones and monuments making for isolated shady areas within which I enjoyed exploring tombstone engravings without the risk of an annoying April sunburn.

Florence Cemetery is on the Alabama Historic Cemetery Register as of March 2009.

Notable Tombstones & Monuments:

Florence Cemetery Mountain Tom Clark
Mountain Tom Clark
Trees in a cemetery
Shady grove of trees in Florence Cemetery
Emmet O'Neil - Alabama Governor
Emmet O’Neil – Alabama Governor 1911 – 1915
Crunk tombstone
Crunk tombstone.
Ovals in a cemetery plot.
Oval Grave Markers within a cemetery plot.

Nearby:  When visiting Florence Cemetery, be sure to “run” over Mountain Tom Clark’s gravesite on Tennessee Street, visit historic downtown Florence, and reflect on your visit with a Panini and iced tea at Rivertown Coffee, Inc. (as I’m doing right now).

Price Cemetery – Polk County, Tennessee

Price Cemetery aka Cloud Cemetery, Polk County, Tennessee
Price Cemetery – Polk County, Tennessee

Name: Price Cemetery
Known As: Cloud Cemetery
State: Tennessee
County: Polk County
Approximate Coordinates: N35 06.790 W84 34.592
Notable Residents: George Cloud

My father’s friend requested that I locate the old “Cloud” Cemetery near her (and my father’s) birthplace. It took me a few days to realize that Cloud Cemetery’s official name is Price Cemetery.

George Cloud - Price Cemetery - Polk County, Tennessee
George Cloud Died Jan. 30 1861

Crystal Valley Cemetery – Manitou Springs, Colorado

Crystal Valley Cemetery – Manitou Springs, Colorado

Crystal Valley Cemetery - Manitou Springs, Colorado
Crystal Valley Cemetery – Manitou Springs, Colorado

Name: Crystal Valley Cemetery
State: Colorado
Coordinates:

Within the shadow of Pike’s Peak, Crystal Valley Cemetery is a quaint cemetery with a number of interesting grave markers reminiscent of the rugged nature of the state of Colorado.

Particularly, I enjoyed the wooden crosses and the bear themed grave markers.

bear tombstone
Bear Tombstone
Wooden cross grave marker.
Kelly – Wooden cross grave marker.
Grave Marker Ornament Tree
Ornaments
In Memory Of
Planted By

 

Aspen Hill Cemetery – Jackson Hole, WY

Most tourists are not interested in cemeteries and Aspen Hill Cemetery in Jackson Hole, Wyoming is not exception.

Aspen Hill Cemetery - Jackson Hole, WY
Aspen Hill Cemetery – Jackson Hole, WY

Name: Aspen Hill Cemetery
State: Wyoming
Coordinates:

Jackson Hole, WY has become a very popular tourist destination.  I readily attempt to avoid tourist traps but sometimes I have to delve into huge crowded areas to find cemeteries.  Luckily, most tourists are not interested in cemeteries so once I enter the cemetery gates I often find a haven of solitude even amongst the most populated areas.

Aspen Hill Cemetery in Jackson Hole, Wyoming is not a polished and highly manicured cemetery.  It is obvious that workers attempt to keep vegetation under control but the tight confines of the grassy areas between headstones make conventional lawn mowing impossible.  Weedeaters are employed as is evident by the end pieces of weedeater line that can be seen amongst the tall grass.  I am of the opinion that most cemeteries should not be finely manicured.  I like the rugged nature of densely populated grave plots.

Aspen Hill Cemetery Grave Sites
Tall Grass Growth in Aspen Hill Cemetery