Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Chinese Funerary Burners, Tombstone Tuesday


Funerary Burners, at the Chinese Cemetery at Harling Point, in Victoria,
British Columbia, Canada. Photographs, M. Diane Rogers, May 2007


Resources on-line

Chinese Funerary Burners: A Census, compiled by Terry Abraham

Chinese Funerary Burners: A Bibliography, compiled by Terry Abraham
Chinese Cemetery at Harling Point, Old Cemeteries Society of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

Harling Point Chinese Cemetery, Victoria, BC, Canada, Graveyard Rabbit of British Columbia, Canada

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Chinese Cemetery - Nanaimo, BC, Canada - Tombstone Tuesday


Chinese Cemetery, Townsite Road, Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
Photographs taken by M. Diane Rogers, May 2008

This cemetery first opened in 1924, and was paid for by members of the Chinese Canadian community in the Nanaimo area (from Chemainus to Qualicum Beach). In the background a burner for spiritual offerings can be seen.

In the 1970s, the Cemetery was refurbished by Nanaimo's Chinese Canadian community and donated to the City of Nanaimo which now operates it. This is no longer exclusively a Chinese cemetery, but the name has been kept.


Sunday, March 8, 2009

Sombre Sunday - 8 March 1888, Victoria, BC, Canada

Somber Sunday, or, ahem, Sombre Sunday, a day to post obituaries or sad stories, is the idea of Brenda Kay Wolfgram Moore who writes at Day-ly Genealogy Blogposts: www.hte46.blogspot.com

I will be posting deaths from British Columbia, Canada.

Those for today were from Vancouver Island and New Westminster, BC as published in The British Colonist newspaper, Victoria, BC, 8 March, 1888.

DEATHS, p. 4
KINGSFORD, At St. Joseph’s Hospital, on the 5th inst., George M. Kingsford, aged 28 years, a native of Halifax, N.S. [mention of funeral]

[ADVERTISEMENT], p. 1
Members of Victoria-Columbia Lodge, No. 1 of the A.F. & A.M. are hereby notified to attend the funeral of our late Bro. George Moore Kingsford, of St. Andrew Lodge, Halifax, N.S., from the Masonic Temple,
On Thursday, (To-Day) at 3:30 pm
Members of Vancouver-Quadra Lodge, No. 2 and sojouring brethren in good standing, are cordially invited to attend.
By order of W.M.
R.B.Esnouf, Secretary mar 8


A PIONEER GONE, p. 4
Mr. James PRICE, a native of Belfast, Ireland, died last evening at the Royal Hospital, aged 72 years. He was an old pioneer of the province.

LOCAL BRIEFS, p. 4
John HANNIGAN, a prisoner at the penitentiary, New Westminster, died on Monday morning last.

LEGAL NOTICES, p. 2
There were also legal notices about 2 estates.

George MILLS, late of Saanich; executrix Mrs. Margaret Ann Mills
Patrick MURPHY, late of Comox; Very Reverend J.J. Jonckau, executor


Recent deaths from elsewhere in Canada and the United States are reported, for instance the death of “Louise A. Allcott, the well-known authoress” p. 4

From The British Colonist, Online Edition, 1858-1910
http://www.britishcolonist.ca

You can search the British Columbia, Canada Vital Events genealogy indexes on-line. Deaths - 1872-1988: www.bcarchives.bc.ca

The British Columbia Genealogical Society will look up copies of British Columbia birth, marriage and death registrations, obituaries, and much more for a nominal fee. See www.bcgs.ca or e-mail: queryrequest@bcgs.ca

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Tombstone Tuesday - Auld Burial Ground, Galashiels, Scotland, 2004 - From My Cemetery Travels


The gate of the Auld Burial Ground at Galashiels, Scotland (also called Old Burial Ground, Old Town, or Gala Aisle Burial Ground or Cemetery), photographs taken June 2004.

Gala Aisle, the burial vault built in 1636, seen to your right through the gate, was originally beside the parish kirk, which was demolished circa 1813-18. Seen beyond the graveyard is St Paul's Kirk steeple.

Some tombstones. I do have a few more photographs from this cemetery and will put them on Flickr.com soon.


The smaller right hand side tombstone from the previous photograph has a fascinating front, now almost up against a tree. There are no longer any visible names or dates. There is visible a skull, some flowers, suns, asterisks? and what appears to be the number 'four' in bones. One author had this to say about the 'number four' motif in Scotland:


"....The other trade emblems speak for themselves, excepting the reversed figure 4 in the stone of 1710 (No. 3). This sign has been variously interpreted, but the most reliable authorities say that it is a merchant's mark used not only in Stirling but in other parts of Scotland, if not of England. There are in Howff Burial-ground, Dundee, and in many country churchyards round about that town and Stirling, numerous varieties of this figure, some having the "4" in the ordinary unreversed shape, some with and some without the *, some of both shapes resting on the letter "M," and others independent of any support whatever. It has also been supposed to have some connection with the masons' marks frequently to be seen in old churches, and is even regarded as possibly of prehistoric origin."13



Figure 1710

Footnote 13: The vulgar explanation of the sign is "4d. discount on the shilling," and some of the guide-books are not much better informed when they assume that it marks Stirling as the fourth city of Scotland, for in the old roll of Scottish burghs Stirling stands fifth


Quoted from In Search Of Gravestones Old And Curious. Author: W.T. (William Thomas) Vincent. Release Date: July 21, 2004 [EBook #12978: html version: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/12978/12978-h/12978-h.htm p. 88-

Originally


GRAVESTONES
OLD AND CURIOUS.
With One Hundred and Two Illustrations
BY
W. T. VINCENT,
PRESIDENT OF THE WOOLWICH DISTRICT ANTIQUARIAN SOCIETY;
AUTHOR OF "THE RECORDS OF THE WOOLWICH DISTRICT,"
ETC., ETC.
LONDON:
MITCHELL & HUGHES, 140, WARDOUR STREET.
1896.

Galashiels Old Burial Ground, Galashiels Town Trail tour: http://www.galashiels.border-net.co.uk/trail/burialground.html

Here are a few photographs of this cemetery on the Geograph British Isles project which is collecting collect geographically representative photographs and information for every square kilometre of Great Britain and Ireland, : http://www.geograph.org.uk/search.php?i=5486447


For transcriptions of monumental inscriptions for this Galashiel cemetery, also for Galashiels deaths 1762-1788, contact Nigel Hardie, Selkirk Genealogy: http://www.sgtranscriptions.co.uk/6.html