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Burial or Cremation?
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Florence61 | Report | 28 Feb 2022 11:41 |
I know this is a sensitive subject but I have been thinking about what arrangements I would like in the event of my passing. |
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PatinCyprus | Report | 28 Feb 2022 11:54 |
I can't look at gravestones of my grandparents and further back to the 1890s. The large municipal graveyard has had the headstones removed and all you see is a great expanse of lawns. There are row markers but most of the graves have flattened so you can't make out individual graves. |
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Florence61 | Report | 28 Feb 2022 11:59 |
Oh Pat how sad for you. Did you know before they were removed where the graves were? |
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PatinCyprus | Report | 28 Feb 2022 12:34 |
Yes we did know where some were as mum took my sister and myself 2 or 3 times a year to clean up the graves and place flowers in the vases. This was until 1962, my maternal grandfather died 1960 my maternal grandmother 1969 and placed in the same grave as my grandfather. All others buried before them. |
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SheilaSomerset | Report | 28 Feb 2022 12:39 |
I am very unsentimental about graves etc. I have only found one family headstone in all my genealogy searching. Yes, they are somewhere 'to go' but after all the people who remembered you are gone, the grave is unlikely to be visited. I want to leave my body to our nearest university hospital, I'm already registered with them and have it in my will. No funeral, no fuss thanks. Over the last 6 years I've lost all my immediate family and have no children so I want the easiest option! |
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AnninGlos | Report | 28 Feb 2022 12:43 |
From a genealogy point of view, if they are still there and accessible, gravestones are useful. I have visited my Grandparents. but my parents were cremated, the ashes buried at the crematorium. I don't need to hold ashes in the house or to visit graves to remember them. My beloved OH was cremated and we scattered his ashes adjacent to his much loved golf course. I don't need to visit there to remember him. I just look at the lovely garden he created and the house he loved, those are my memorials. I also created a sort of memorial in our favourite place in the garden where we would sit having a drink on sunny evenings. People who you have loved stay in your heart. |
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Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it | Report | 28 Feb 2022 12:50 |
We have all moved out of the family area where we grew up and some are buried in the local church and municipal cemetery |
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Florence61 | Report | 28 Feb 2022 13:23 |
Thanks for your thoughts ladies. |
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JustGinnie | Report | 28 Feb 2022 13:52 |
My parents were both cremated and ashes spread on the same lawn at the crematorium. OH parents are buried in the same plot at the cemetery and he goes sometimes as do his sisters. |
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Kucinta | Report | 28 Feb 2022 14:37 |
I don't want fuss, so just want a direct cremation, no service, trimmings etc. Just the simplest, cheapest package. |
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KathleenBell | Report | 28 Feb 2022 15:51 |
Hubby and I spent many hours visiting the graves of ancestors that I didn't even know about until I started my family history research. Some of the headstones gave us extra information about other relatives.. I actually like spending time in cemeteries - they always seem to have a peaceful feeling about them. |
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ArgyllGran | Report | 28 Feb 2022 16:37 |
Gravestones, especially those dating from before censuses and statutory registration, can be very useful for genealogy researchers, as we all know. |
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JoyLouise | Report | 28 Feb 2022 16:48 |
Kathleen - your first para - my OH is like that. He loves the peaceful atmosphere. |
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Bobtanian | Report | 28 Feb 2022 16:52 |
My dad and my brother are in a green woodland cemetery, along with our Mums ashes.... |
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JoyLouise | Report | 28 Feb 2022 16:57 |
By the way, the cemetery keeper (gardener etc) of the cemetery where my paternal grandparents are buried was able to point out where they both were; for my Gran by pacing out from a nearby grave. It was a rough estimate for my Gran (but I now know she is right next to a bush and her grave is on the perimeter next to someone's lovely garden. |
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JoyLouise | Report | 28 Feb 2022 17:04 |
Bob, my sister and her OH have already paid for their funerals - no ceremony, cremation with no one there, then ashes taken down south and scattered (I believe) somewhere that the family won't know. I don't know whether her children know about that arrangement yet. |
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Annx | Report | 28 Feb 2022 18:36 |
Many village churchyards here have had any gravestones except the big vaults/ memorials, removed and leaned along the edges of the churchyard against walls so you don't even know where they were actually buried unless you get the vicar to show you a map of the plots. It's always seemed disrespectful to me. |
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JoyLouise | Report | 28 Feb 2022 18:57 |
Ann, our market place was built on top of the old graveyard. The church is still standing and in use. |
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Annx | Report | 28 Feb 2022 20:19 |
Yes I can imagine that would stick in your mind whenever you go there Joylouise! It amazes me that the whereabouts of something like a graveyard, like other things really didn't get passed down many generations. My own surprise was them finding Richard 111 buried under the carpark just over the wall surrounding my school playground where we skipped and ran about. I still wonder if there are other graves that are under the road or even our school! I'd better shut up now as I'm going 'off topic!' |
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Tawny | Report | 1 Mar 2022 09:09 |
My father in law was buried in 1983 and when his dad died in 2010 he was cremated and then his ashes buried with his son. His mum died in 2020 and she too was cremated. At the moment her daughter, Mr Owls aunt Jane still has them in a box however my mother in law has said she will give permission if Jane decides she wants her mum’s ashes buried with her dad and brother. |
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