The swing faces this marker:
One can only assume that Gerald's parents spent quite a few hours in the swing while visiting with their deceased son. Mt. Sinai also includes this amazing stainless steel marker:
The photos don't do it justice.
The Fairmount Cemetery is located on Texas Highway 87.
Like the Mt. Sinai Cemetery, it is relatively old and has a Texas Historical Commission book on a stick providing a brief history:
I was actually more intrigued by the sign instructing people not to bury pets in the cemetery (enlarge the first photo to see; it's the smaller sign on the fence) -- is that a common problem? Most markers in the cemetery were standard, 20th century commercial stones, although there were a few graves marked only with fieldstones:
There was also one vernacular marker that was a little unusual in having a replacement gravestone placed adjacent to it. Usually the vernacular stones are discarded when a commercial stone replaces them.The Ener Cemetery near Yellowpine is a traditional pioneer family cemetery.
A few of the older stones have weathered to the point of being difficult to read, but most are still quite legible, and are standard commercial markers.
The Yellowpine Cemetery is a relatively new community cemetery. Like the other three, it is well maintained.
I'm always intrigued when cemeteries located close to each other geographically exhibit different customs or practices, and Yellowpine does have a few characteristics not seen at Mt. Sinai or Fairmount. Putting an edging around the family plot and keeping it neat with sand or crushed white rock is a popular practice:
This plot with its carefully raked sand is reminiscent of a Zen garden:
I was also quite frankly stunned by this:
I'm hoping this has some meaning for the family that isn't obvious to an outsider, because "Ho! Ho! Ho!" feels like a rather odd sentiment to place on a grave.
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