Wednesday, January 27, 2010
The Direction of Numbers
Dave and Tom and I met with the Metro Pioneer Cemetery folks yesterday and were presented with the list of burials in MPC, all 11,567 of them!
It is apparent that Rachel and her staff have a passion for the work and I left feeling that the management of the pioneer cemeteries is in very good hands.
There will be gaps in the records and misspellings and the missing markers are sure to drive us across the street to Starbucks to scratch our heads and pour over records over a mocha or two!
Dave is doing an outstanding job of documenting the headstones and our Findagrave page for the cemetery has more than 2000 entries.
Are there really 11K interments in this cemetery? I suspect we will find more.
Friday, January 22, 2010
The Dark Divide is an area of spectacular scenery seldom visited, and little known. It is located between Mounts St Helens and Adams in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest.
So, what does the Dark Divide in Washington have to do with a cemetery in Portland, Oregon? A lot actually. Because it was while I was on a hike in this wild country that I was introduced to the website findagrave.com by my hiking companion and also genealogist. Had I not been told about that website I probably would not have started posting my photos of tombstones to that website. Had I not started posting photos to findagrave I wouldn't have asked Eric if he wanted to start censusing Multnomah Park Cemetery in our neighborhood of Lents, Portland. Had we not started our censusing project we wouldn't have learned about the Morningside Hospital and the patients and their families in Alaska.
One thing leads to another for a reason.
Dave
So, what does the Dark Divide in Washington have to do with a cemetery in Portland, Oregon? A lot actually. Because it was while I was on a hike in this wild country that I was introduced to the website findagrave.com by my hiking companion and also genealogist. Had I not been told about that website I probably would not have started posting my photos of tombstones to that website. Had I not started posting photos to findagrave I wouldn't have asked Eric if he wanted to start censusing Multnomah Park Cemetery in our neighborhood of Lents, Portland. Had we not started our censusing project we wouldn't have learned about the Morningside Hospital and the patients and their families in Alaska.
One thing leads to another for a reason.
Dave
Labels:
Dark Divide,
hiking,
Mount Adams,
Washington
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Getting Underway
For many years, Dave and I have been working on our family genealogies. That usually entails looking through archives, getting documents and, if we are lucky, photos. One of the more interesting tools to the genealogist is the website, findagrave.com. The folks there have managed to put on-line, the memorials to millions of people who have died and their information made available to the world wide web. It is through our desire to add to findagrave that the Friends of Multnomah Park Cemetery was created.
Dave and I live in the Lents Neighborhood of Portland, Oregon. On the outskirts of that neighborhood lies Multnomah Park Pioneer Cemetery.
Multnomah Park Cemetery was founded in 1888 by O. P. Lent, Gustaf Petersen, George P. Lent, Robert Gilbert and William Kern, all of whom are buried in the cemetery. After its establishment, Mr. Lent operated the cemetery and somewhere around 1906 it was deeded to Multnomah County. The county operated the cemetery until its operation was transferred to Metro in 1996.
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