Posts filed under ‘Cemeteries’
Unfortunate Gravestones
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Group fights for recognition of veterans resting at abandoned Jacksonville cemetery
Many of the sites, including Sunset Memorial, were owned by the storied Afro-American Life Insurance Co., which started in Jacksonville at the turn of the 20th century. The sites fell into disrepair as the company slid into bankruptcy through the 1980s, and when it shut down in the 1990s the burial grounds became overgrown and unorganized.
Buffalo Soldier Gets Long-Overdue Rest
After nearly three-quarters of a century, Cpl. Isaiah Mays, a member of a legendary Black fighting unit and Medal of Honor recipient, can rest with dignity.
On Friday, a group of African-American veterans, U.S. Army soldiers and those who traveled by motorcycle from faraway places like Arizona and California, paid their respects as the brave Buffalo Soldier received a long-overdue hero’s burial at Arlington National Cemetery.
Born a slave in Virginia in 1858, Mays headed West at an early age and joined the famed Buffalo Soldiers and fought in the frontier Indian Wars. In 1889, he was deployed to guard a wagonload of Army gold. He and his brigade were ambushed, and most of them were either killed or seriously wounded. The bandits escaped with nearly $30,000 in gold coins. Mays himself was shot in both legs but managed to crawl for two miles to a ranch for help.
The following year, he was awarded the Medal of Honor, the military’s highest award for bravery. When Mays applied for a federal pension in 1893, he was denied. Instead, he was committed to an Arizona state hospital for the mentally ill and indigent. After his death in 1925, he was buried in an unmarked grave in the hospital cemetery.
After several years, some members of the hospital staff located his grave and arranged for a formal ceremony on Memorial Day 2001. On Friday, those paying their respects included William McCurtis, a regimental sergeant major of the Buffalo Soldier group.
“One more out of 6,000 has his day of recognition,” he said during the ceremony. “We need to get the rest recognized.”
Three “Slaves” Get Formal Burial
After spending three decades in a New Jersey museum, the 200-year-old remains of three Black slaves were interred at a small African-American cemetery last week.
The Coolest Headstone Ever!!
The coolest headstone ever.