Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Wordless Wednesday: "Carved in Stone" Date Is Wrong


My great-great-uncle Joseph Jacobs (1864-1918) did not die on November 22, 1919, as his headstone at Mt. Zion Cemetery in Queens, NY, indicates. He was the younger brother of my great-great-grandma Tillie Rose Jacobs Mahler (1857?-1952).

Actually, Joe died 98 years ago, on November 3, 1918, but his headstone was erected just over a year later. The date carved in stone reflects the date of "unveiling" the stone, not the date that great-great-uncle Joe died.

How did I find out the truth? I obtained Joe's death cert and I also checked with the cemetery. But the "age 54 years" part of the stone is entirely true.

Now I know: Dates "carved in stone" aren't always correct, so dig deeper to confirm.

4 comments:

  1. How interesting that the unveiling date ended up on the stone. Good thing you continued to explore other records!

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  2. At least the "carved in stone" date helped narrow down this ancestor's death date.

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  3. Who ordered the stone? Is there a reason someone would choose the unveiling date instead of death date? Family historians have enough problems without people messing with dates like this !

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  4. So many questions, so few answers, Wendy. After 98 years, I feel lucky to have his real death date and have visited his final resting place. So let's remind future generations: Be careful what you have carved in stone!

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