Two weeks before my grandmother Ada Cloyd was nine (9) years
old she lost her mother to tuberculosis (TB). Grandma did not talk much and if
you wanted information you had to pry it out of her. I asked her once what she
remembered about her childhood and she said she remembered that when her mother
died she and her two older sisters, ages 13 and 11, and her younger brother,
age 7 were all sitting on the bed around her father as he told them what had
happened. She said that all of them were crying. That may have been my
grandmother’s only lasting memory of her parents because two weeks later her
father was found dead under a tree where he had been plowing with his mules. He
was buried on my grandmother’s 9th birthday, May 27, 1916. Uncle
Vince and Aunt Lucy and their daughter, who lived just down the road on the
neighboring farm, moved into their house and provided the care and guidance needed
until she and her siblings were grown. I am sure there were lots of stresses
and struggles with that arrangement but my grandmother always held Uncle Vince
and Aunt Lucy in high regards.
Her parents were buried in the family plot in a country
cemetery. I have visited that cemetery a few times and have observed that many
of the older graves are simply marked with sandstone rocks without name or
words of eulogy or notations of the deceased date of birth and death. Such was
the case with my great-grandparents when they were buried there in 1916. Poor people
have poor ways. There were more critical things to spend money on than a properly
cut and inscribed stone. It was left to family and friends to remember where
their loved ones were buried. It was the responsibility of the older
generations to pass this information and the accompanying stories along. Though
my grandmother had a limited experience with her parents, preserving their
legacy and memory was important to her. Those barren sandstone grave markers
were not sufficient to honor their lives. When she became an adult, perhaps
twenty or more years after her parents death she purchased out of her own funds
granite tombstones that have now for decades marked the resting place of Noah
and Izabel Gill. I was born 41 years after the deaths of my great-grandparents.
But I know their story because someone told me. I can find their graves because
someone respected them enough to buy a tombstone. It is right to honor our
dead. It is good to preserve our memories. It is healthy to recall who we are
even if when we do not know the ancestors in our lineage that made us who we
are. Remembering our loved ones who have
gone on demonstrates our love and gratitude and regard for them. Taking the
time and effort to do so adds value and dignity to our own human story.
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