
Last Wednesday, my English class and I, took a field trip up to a small graveyard. This graveyard was surrounded by a rusted old gate that had been locked by a heavy, rusted, old chain and a big 'Best' lock. On the left side of the gate, it seemed that someone had broken in, because the gate was busted and bent so that you could easily walk in. Of course, we walked in and looked around the graves.To some people, it seemed as if they were walking on dead bodies. There was a ditch in the ground that people were afraid to step on. I did not feel as if we were walking on dead people, just more land, that was more fertile and green than the rest, because of the rich nutrients provided for the earth by the bodies. There was one tall obelisk gravestone with four names on it: Daniel Dana Scribner, M.D (23 Jul 1822 - 23 Apr 1863); Sarah Jane Ansley (16 Feb 1836 - 9 Aug 1883); Arthur Scribner; and Walter Scribner. They were each engraved on the four sides of the grave. To the left of the obelisk tomb, there were small matte stones poking out of the ground. These, we found out, were foot and head stones to mark where the bodies were buried. Towards the right of the graveyard, there was another gravestone, this one with the name: Mary Winifred Andrews (29 Jun 1826 - 31 Jul 1882) embedded on it. There was also a foot-stone behind it. This gravestone brought many qestions to my mind. It seemed to have been someone not part of the family because she had a different last name, perhaps a close friend or relative. She must have been someone special, because she was buried with the family. Another thing that came to my mind was that Walter and Arthur Scribner were 17 months (Walter) and 19 months (Arthur) old at death. They were probably Sarah Ansley and Daniel Dana's children, but I found it curious that both children died so young. I thought that they could have been twins, but my questions remained unanswered.
After we got back to school, with so many questions in mind, several of my peers did research on the family. Ms. Chesser also had done some extensive research that she shared with us. Sarah Ansley was, as we predicted, Daniel Dana's wife, although, she has previously been a widow. Mary Winifred turned out to be Sarah's sister, who'd been a widow twice and was left with four children, and pregnant after her second husband died. We have clues that would lead us to think that Daniel Dana did not serve in the civil war, but about that we are still unsure. He, like Mary's second husband, left Sarah a widow for the second time after his death. Because the death and birth dates of the children weren't written in the grave, we are also uncertain on whether they died before or after Daniel Scribner, and for what reasons they died so young.
Who knew that gravestone could lead you to uncover such an extensive story about someone's past?