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Memorial to Civil War soldiers |
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Entrance to the Hebrew Cemetery |
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One of the many yellow fever victims found in Oakdale |
Please share what you've been shooting with your camera using the linky below, and come on back next week!
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Lovely history!
ReplyDeleteLovely series, I like cemeteries and the walk though...
ReplyDeleteMy favorite photo is the first.
Thanks for hosting :-)
Thanks Sue for this peek into history!
ReplyDeleteSomber pictures this week. We don't really have such cemeteries around due to land limitations and restrictions. Most of the dead are now placed in niches.
ReplyDeleteNice shots ...very poignant
ReplyDeleteHave a tanfabulous week :-)
Very cool images.
ReplyDeleteSobering images x
ReplyDeleteGorgeous textures!!
ReplyDeleteYes, indeed, wonderful photos, I especially like the framing of the first!
ReplyDeleteGreat series of captures. thank you for showing.
ReplyDeleteGreat old photos!!
ReplyDeleteIt took me to link up so that I could see the pictures, lol what a glitch.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing, now you have a great day!
Thank you very much, NC Sue!
ReplyDeleteSo peaceful... I actually love visiting cemeteries..
ReplyDeleteInteresting photos. I love the history.
ReplyDeletehttp://joycelansky.blogspot.com/2014/11/ww-just-like-mom-used-to-make.html
These photos are beautiful.
ReplyDeletethese are great captures.Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteHello,
ReplyDeletewhat wonderful old cemeteries, great pictures!
I wish you a nice week,
moni
That first photo is gorgeous. I love it.
ReplyDeleteAlways sad !
ReplyDeleteBeautiful entrance!
ReplyDeleteEmotional and powerful photos this week!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful Photos. You captured it perfectly.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful and sad at the same time.
ReplyDeleteI like the one with the gate.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shots! Have a terrific day!
ReplyDeleteGreat images! Thanks for sharing them!
ReplyDeleteI used to spend a lot of time on cemeteries and churchyards when I did family history research. I find them wonderfully calm places and love to speculate on the lives the people who rest there once led. The tree growing around the gravestone is a beautiful reminder of the passing of time. Am I right in reading that LS Day was born in London? I wonder if they found a better life before their untimely death so young?
ReplyDeleteYou definitely have an eye for a great image, and I thank you for sharing. Have a great day & thanks for stopping by. Hope you stop by again next Wednesday :)
ReplyDeleteHaunting but beautiful. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteGreat photos of a quiet place.
ReplyDeleteLovely story, nice fotos cimetery , greeting from belgium
ReplyDeleteI use to live in Charleston, SC back in the 1970's. My wife at the time and I use to go camping and visit old cemeteries. How mother nature reclaimed some of them is amazing.
ReplyDeleteGreat photos. The weathering makes them all the more poignant.
ReplyDeleteIts wonderful blog really very nice site and blog facility.every title is very nice and very fatastic concept. Thanks for sharing the information.
ReplyDeleteTerrific way of expressing those things in your post. Clear cut meanings.
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