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The island of Nantucket, located 50 km south from Cape Cod, is the main component of the Town of Nantucket (10,172 inhabitants in 2010), which also includes the smaller islands of Tuckernuck and Muskeget.
Nantucket as the whaling capital of the world
Nantucket was settled in 1659 by English farmers and shepherds. The island, soon
covered with farms and livestock herds, quickly lacked sources of income for an
ever-increasing population. At the time, the waters located south of the island
were an autumn meeting place for hundreds of whales. While the Wampanoag natives
harvested "drift whales" that washed ashore, the English settlers did not care
pursuing "right whales" as the English settlers of Cape Cod and Eastern Long
Island had already been doing. Around 1690, however, an islander described the
scene as "a green pasture where our children's grandchildren will go for bread".
Ichabod Paddock, a Cape Cod whaler, was hired to instruct the islanders. They
established a debt servitude system that supplied the early whaling boats with
Wampanoag manpower. In 1712, Captain Hussey, pushed out northwards by the winds,
spotted and harpooned a sperm whale, hitherto unknown to the islanders. Sperm
whales soon appeared as more dangerous but more profitable than right whales:
the quality of they blubber's oil was superior and they produced highly-prized
spermaceti. Nantucket turned into the main port of sperm whale pursuit,
surpassing the other ports established on the main land and Long Island.
By
1760, the Nantucketers had exhausted the local whale resource. Technical
progress, however, allowed them to build big ships suitable for ocean-going
voyages and onboard oil processing. The Nantucket fleet pursued whales up to the
Arctic, the western coast of Africa, the eastern coast of South America and the
Falkland Islands. Nicknamed the "Nation of Nantucket" by the poet Ralph Waldo
Emerson (1803-1882), the island was described in 1775 by the Irish statesman
Edmond Burke (1729-1797) as the cradle of "a new American breed". In 1702, Mary
Coffin Starbuck (1645-1717, aka "The Great Mary of Nantucket") converted to
Quakerism, introduced on the island by the minister John Richardson (1667-1753).
The whalemen, described by Herman Melville (1819-1891) as "Quakers with a
vengeance" set a convenient parallel between their sole source of income and
religion; those "pacifist killers" simply enacted God's will. The Quaker's South
Meetinghouse, built in 1792, attracted up to 2,000 people in scheduled meetings,
being not only a temple but also a convenient meeting place.
Nearly
stopped during the Revolution and War of 1812, whaling resumed in Nantucket
after peace had been restored. Sperm whales were pursued in the Pacific Ocean,
which increased the duration of the voyages from nine months to two or three
years. Nantucket, then the whaling capital of the world, fully depended on the
whale resource and of continental manpower, following the extinct of the
Wampanoag population. Since most adult men stayed on the island only for short
periods between whaling campaigns, women had to raise children, to oversee the
island's business and to maintain commercial and personal relationships within
the island's community. In 1810, nearly one quarter of the Nantucket women over
the age of 23 had lost their husbands to the sea - therefore their nickname of
"Cape Horn widows" - and there were 472 fatherless children. When Herman
Melville visited Nantucket in summer 1852, one year after the publication of
"Moby Dick". the island, superseded as the whaling capital of the world by New
Bedford and devastated by a fire in 1846, had already entered in economic
depression. The last whaling ship departed from Nantucket in 1869.
After
Nathaniel Philbrick, "How Nantucket Came to Be the Whaling Capital of the
World". Smithsonian Magazine, December 2015
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/nantucket-came-to-be-whaling-capital-of-world-180957198/
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Source
The signal flags, owners' flags and house flags of
Nantucket whalers were compiled by Robert R. Newell, a retired advertising
executive and noted amateur marine artist, who illustrated them in the poster
"The Private Signals of Nantucket Whaling Merchants". Following his death, his
widow donated all the related material to the Old Dartmouth Historical Society.
Donald E. Ridley, a retired marine engineer and a volunteer Assistant Curator at
the Kendall Whaling Museum in Sharon, MA, and at the New Bedford Whaling Museum,
thoroughly browsed Newell's material and attempted to authenticate the flags
after genuine sources - Newell failed to cite his sources. Ridley authenticated
140 out of the190 flags reported for Nantucket by Newell, correcting the color
scheme for 8 of them.
Ridley's sources were first-hand reports found in log
books, journals and diaries from the 1831-1853 period, complemented with Taber
Brothers' "Whaling Directory of the United States" (1869) and the poster
"Signals of the Nantucket Whaling Fleet 1788-1865" (uncredited), kept at the
Nantucket Historical Association.
The complete reference of Ridley's
monograph is:
Nantucket Signal Flags, Owners' Flag, and House Flags of Nantucket Whalers
Compiled by Donald E. Ridley, P.E.; Foreword by Stuart M. Frank, Ph.D.
Illustrations based on the flag paintings of Robert R. Newell, corrected and
edited by Donald E. Ridley and Michael Lapides.
Kendall Monograph No. 16,
2004
Stuart M. Frank, Series Editor
Published by the New Bedford Whaling
Museum, Old Dartmouth Historical
Society, New Bedford, MA
The
monograph is available online:
https://www.whalingmuseum.org/sites/default/files/pdf/KWM%20Monorgaph%20Series%20No%2016_Nantucket%20Signals.pdf
Donald E. Ridley is also the author of a noted study "Determination of
authenticity of engraved scrimshaw", pp. 33-54 in "Fakebusters II. Scientific
detection of fakery in art and philately", edited by Richard J. Weiss and Duane
Chartier, World Scientific Publishing Co., 2004.
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Out of the 140 flags reported by Ridley, 104 are rectangular; among them, 7
are represented with an odd "steamer" extending from the mid part of the fly.
Another 20 flags are swallow-tailed, triangular pennants, 12 are simple
triangular pennants, while the 4 remaining flags are made of two simple,
triangular pennants placed one above each other.
The colors used are white
(on 133 flags), blue (on 123 flags), and red (on 72 flags).
Most flags
used basic field combinations (plain field, vertical or horizontal stripes,
cross, saltire), often charged with letters (initials on 28 flags, ship's full
name on 6 flags). Other charges are mostly simple geometric shapes (disc on 19
flags, stars) on 7 flags, diamond on 3 flags, rectangle on 3 flags. Only 4 flags
feature figurative elements: a tree (?), four anchors, a harpooner, and a sperm
whale (on two related flags).
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Ridley comments: "There are a number of instances where the same flag was
used by more than one entity. Most cases involved a number of related persons,
e.g. the Starbucks all used the same flag."
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Freeman E. Adams & Son (1865-1869)
Barks "B. Colcord", "M. Wrightonington"
and "Oak"
Schooner "E. H. Adams"
Quartered white and red in saltire.
Captain Freeman Adams (1811-1876), born in Cotuit, MA, owned the whaleship
firm of Freeman E. Adams & Sons. In 1866, the company purchased the bark "B.
Colcord", which sailed under the command of Captain Edward McCleave, and, in
1867, the bark "Oak of Boston", which was fitted for whaling in New Bedford, MA,
under the command of Joshua T. Chadwick.
http://www.prospecthillcemetery.com/milestones - Histories of Persons
Interred at Prospect Hill Cemetery
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Barrett & Upton (1828-1845) / J. W. Barrett & Sons (1846-1851)
Ships
"Maria", "Napoleon", "Ontario", "United States" and "Walter Scott"
White
flag with a blue cross throughout.
John Wendell Barrett (1794-1866) was a
prominent merchant and President of Pacific National Bank. The inventory of his
assets at the time of his death included two houses, a store on wharf, shares in
a boot and shoe factory, whale oil (55,692 gallons), cash and silver plate. His
wife, Lydia Mitchell Barrett (1793-1861), was the daughter of successful whaling
merchant Christopher Mitchell.
http://www.prospecthillcemetery.com/milestones - Histories of Persons
Interred at Prospect Hill Cemetery
"When the Great Fire of 1846 was
raging up through the business section of Main Street on that fateful July
night, it appeared that nothing could prevent it from engulfing the Barrett
mansion. Despite the pleas of his family and friends, Lydia Mitchell Barrett
refused to leave her home, saying in her Quaker manner that if the house was to
be burned she wished to go with it. While the flames leaped high in the night
sky, and the cries of the fire fighters rang out, and the boom of bursting
powder kegs, which were used to blow up buildings in the path of the fire, added
terror to the scene, Mrs. Barrett sat in her front room -- a
silent watcher.
Then suddenly, as though by miraculous intervention, the wind shifted and the
flames veered to the north, along Center Street, and the Barrett mansion was
saved. But Lydia Barrett did not collapse in reaction to this good fortune;
instead she busied herself organizing supplies of food and coffee for the
firefighters."
[Edward A. Stackpole & Melvin B. Summerfield. Nantucket
Doorways. Thresholds to the Past. Madison Books, 1974]
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Charles G. Coffin (1836) / C. G. & H. Coffin (1831-1854)
Ships "Catawba",
"Charles & Henry", "Citizen", "Columbia", "Constitution", "Edward Cary",
"Independence", and "Zenas Coffin"
Flag horizontally divided in 15
horizontal stripes, in turn red and white, with a blue canton charged with white
stars, seven stripes in height. Ridley states that "the house flag had a
variable number of stars in different arrangements in the blue canton".
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
C. G. & H. Coffin (1851-1859)
Same ships as above but "Charles & Henry"
and "Independence"
Flag made of two red pennants stacked vertically.
"The firm of Charles G. and Henry Coffin was among the last in Nantucket
whaling companies to close its books; its last ship -- the "Constitution" --
sailed in 1857 and was sold to New York upon its return home in 1863. Many of
their vessels made notable voyages, the "Catawba", the "Omega", the "Peruvian",
and the "Zenas Coffin" among them. But one of their ships has a claim to
literary as well as whaling fame: this was the one named for the two brothers --
the "Charles & Henry".
In the late fall of 1842, the ship was lying at
Tahiti, and Captain John B. Coleman, disheartened by the poor quality of his
boatsteerers (harpooners), signed on a young American he found ashore looking
for a berth. In signing on the young man wrote, in a bold hand, the name "Herman
Melville". Melville was to serve until July of the next year (1843), when he
received his honorable discharge at Lahaina, the port on the island of Maui in
the Hawaiian islands. From his experience on the "Charles & Henry" the author
incorporated a number of passages in his books. It is to be noted that Captain
Coleman received a better treatment than the master of the "Acushnet",
Melville's first whaler.
[...]
In their close association over the years, Charles G. and Henry Coffin were the
epitome of honorable businessmen, maintaining the tradition of a firm founded by
their grandfather, Captain Micajah Coffin, and developed by Zenas Coffin, their
father."
[Edward A. Stackpole & Melvin B. Summerfield. Nantucket
Doorways. Thresholds to the Past. Madison Books, 1974]
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Gilbert Coffin (1829-1844)
Ships "Enterprise" and "Planter"
Blue flag
with a thin horizontal white stripe in the center, extending beyond the flag's
fly.
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Gilbert Coffin & Sons (1820-1826)
Ships "Dauphin", "Galen" and
"Improvement"
Red flag with a thin horizontal white stripe in the center,
extending beyond the flag's fly.
Gilbert Coffin was a son of Micajah Coffin, therefore a brother of Zenas
Coffin and an uncle of Charles and Henry Coffin.
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Gorham Coffin (1836-1838)
Ships "Christopher Mitchell", "Maria",
"Peruvian", "Phebe" and "Walter Scott"
White flag with a red cross
throughout.
Roland Coffin (1806-1826) is listed on the manifest of the
"Globe" a Nantucket ship.
The "Globe" sailed out of Martha's Vineyard on
December 20, 1822 for a whaling voyage around Cape Horn. A mutiny resulting in
the murders of the Captain, first mate, second mate and third mate occurred.
Samuel Comstock, who then sailed the "Globe" to the Mulgrave Islands, led the
mutiny. Six crew members escaped, who later giving depositions to the U.S.
Consul at Valparaiso, Chile, cut the lines and sailed to Chile leaving the other
seamen behind. Comstock was shot by his accomplices, for giving clothes and
other items to the natives, before the items had been divided. When the schooner
"Dolphin" arrived at the islands and found William Lay and Cyrus Hussey, the
only survivors, the others, including Roland Coffin having been killed by the
natives.
Gorham Coffin, one of the owners of the "Globe" and Roland's
uncle was outraged at the accounts in the depositions implying Roland was
suspected of having knowledge of the mutiny, and was an informant to Comstock
about the crew after the mutiny. He wrote to Secretary of State John Quincy
Adams "not wishing to extenuate his fault, if guilty, but to prevent if possible
that aught may be set down in malice." He also wrote to Secretary of the Navy
Samuel L. Southard "while justice is stern, may not her sister virtue, mercy, be
awed into silence, but be ready to extend her shield, over those who have been
forced to yield to necessity, with a drawn sword over their heads." Having this
letter forwarded to Commodore Hull and writing to Daniel Webster with the
argument in Roland's defense as the crew was jealous of Roland due to his hard
work and being related to owners of the ship.
http://www.prospecthillcemetery.com/milestones - Histories of Persons
Interred at Prospect Hill Cemetery
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
William B. Coffin (1834-1844)
Ships "Lima", "Peruvian" and "Planter"
White flag with a red cross throughout.
See Gorham Coffin (1836-1838) (above).
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Matthew Crosby (1834-1856)
Ships "American", "Mariner", "Navigator" and
"Washington"
Bark "Islander"
Flag horizontally divided white-red-white.
Matthew Crosby (1791-1878) was a bank director, merchant, pilot, ship
captain, and owner of the ship "American".
https://www.nha.org/library/ms/ms4.htm - Nantucket Historical Association
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
Field & Sanford (1848-1852)
Ships "Lexington", "Memnon" and "Richard
Mitchell"
Frederick C. Sanford (1838-1847)
Ships "Lexington" and "Rambler"
Red swallow-tailed pennant.
Frederick Coleman Sanford (1809-1890) was a
whaleman, trader, agent for A.A. Low Brothers (Clipper Ship era), farmer and
President of Pacific National Bank.
http://www.prospecthillcemetery.com/milestones - Histories of Persons
Interred at Prospect Hill Cemetery
Frederick C. Sanford wrote in the
"Nantucket Inquirer" in 1852 that these early adventurers made it around Cape
Horn "in a class of vessels that would be considered unsafe at this day to
perform a summer voyage across the Atlantic, small in size, not exceeding 250
tonnes in burthen, heavy, dull sailers, without copper on their bottoms, poorly
and scantily fitted indeed, but manned with men of iron nerve, and an energy
that knew no turning."
http://www.n-magazine.com/rounding-the-horn/ - N Magazine, 20 April 2015
Ivan Sache, 31 January 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
Philip H. Folger (1828-1839)
Ships "Baltic", "Orbit", "Ploughboy" and
"Reaper"
Schooner "Lexington"
image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
Val Hussey & P.H. Folger (1825)
Ship "Harvest"
Val Hussey & Bros.
(1822-1839)
Ships "Fabius", "Indus", "North American" and "Ploughboy"
Samuel B. Folger (1828-1837)
Ships "Harvest", "Martha" and "Montano"
Blue
flag with a white disc.
Folger's flag as the owner of ships "Congress" and
"Fame" (1826-1839) was white with a blue border all around and a red disk in the
center.
Philip H. Folger (1792-1865) was a successful whaling merchant.
He was the "Owner/Agent" of ship "Congress".
http://www.prospecthillcemetery.com/milestones - Histories of Persons
Interred at Prospect Hill Cemetery
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
F. W. Hussey (1833-1845)
Ships "Kingston" and "Orion"
S. & T. Hussey
(1835)
Ship "Howard"
T. Hussey & Sons (1820-1832)
Ships "Howard",
"North American" and "Orion"
Timothy Hussey (1836-1845)
Ships "Howard",
"Kingston" and "Orion"
Red flag with a white cross throughout.
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
Daniel Jones (1822-1845)
Ships "Atlantic", "American", "David Padock",
"Francis", "Ganges", "Henry", "Mary", Spartan"
Flag vertically divided
red-white-red.
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
Joseph B. Macy (1855-1869)
Schooners "Abby Bradford", "Hamilton"; "R. L.
Barstow", "Rainbow", "Watchman" and "William P. Doliver"
Barks "Amy" and
"Bohio"
Blue flag with a white diamond charged with a black "M".
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
T. & P. Macy (1831-1845)
Ships "Aurora", "Ocean", "Phoenix" and "Potomac"
Thomas Macy (1836-1837)
Ships "Aurora", "Orbit" and "Phoenix"
White flag
with a blue disc.
Thomas Macy (1796-1838) was a son of Obed Macy
(1762-1844), author of "The History of Nantucket".
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
Aaron Mitchell (1819-1846)
Ships "Independence", "Mary Mitchell", "Obed
Mitchell", "Oeno", "Rambler", "Spermo", and "Susan"
Flag vertically divided
blue-red by a white diamond.
On 26 January 1824, Aaron Mitchell and Co.'s
whale ship "Oeno" of Nantucket, 328 tons, Captain George Worth, discovered an
island 80 miles northwest of Pitcairn. The low, barren island, with a dangerous
reef off its coast point, is named "Oeno Island". It is one of the four islands
of the Pitcairn group.
Herbert Ford. Pitcairn Island as a Port of Call. A
Record, 1790-2010.
McFarland & Co., 2012
Ivan Sache, 1 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
Jethro Mitchell (1819)
Ship "Ark"
Red flag with a white disk.
Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
Paul Mitchell & Sons (1819-1835)
Ships "Colombus", "Foster", "Japan",
"Pacific" and "Richard Mitchell"
Richard Mitchell (1831-1837)
Ships
"Alexander Coffin", "Colombus" and "Foster"
R. Mitchell & Co. (1819-1836)
Ships "Alexander Coffin" and "Tarquin"
R. Mitchell & Sons (1831-1841)
Ships "Alexander Coffin", "Columbus", "Foster" and "Richard Mitchell"
Flag
quartered blue and white.
The "Richard Mitchell" was built in 1829 and
was rated at 386 tons. Her owners were P. Mitchell & Sons, the same family that
owned the ill-fated whale ship "Globe". Her master, David Baker, was a seasoned
captain who undertook four Pacific whaling voyages between 1826 and 1841.
http://tenpound.com/bookmans-log/book/log-of-the-nantucket-whale-ship-richard-mitchell-1829-1831-4
- Ten Pound Island Book Co.
The Nantucket Whaling Museum is housed in
Richard Mitchell's 1846 spermaceti candle factory.
Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
Joseph Mitchell (1837)
Ship "Obed Mitchell"
Samuel Mitchell (1836)
Ship "Ontario"
S. & J. Mitchell (1828-1834)
Ships "George" and "Zone"
White flag with a thin red stripe at top and a thin blue stripe at bottom.
Joseph Mitchell (1809-1885) was Master of the ship "Three Brothers" and the
bark "Phoenix". He was also in the merchant service and was involved in
mercantile pursuits in San Francisco and the Sandwich Islands.
http://www.prospecthillcemetery.com/milestones - Histories of Persons
Interred at Prospect Hill Cemetery
Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
John H. Shaw (1839-1855)
Ships "Alabama", "Apphia Maria", "Baltic",
"Barclay", " Columbia", "Jefferson", "Monticello" and "Mount Vernon".
J. H.
Shaw & W. Folger (1844)
Ship "Niphon"
Flag vertically divided
blue-white-red.
Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
image by Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019
G. & M. Starbuck & Co. (1840-1860)
Ships "Edward Cary", "Empire", "Fabius",
"Gazelle", "Hero", "Joseph Starbuck", "Nauticon", "Norman", "Ocean Rover",
"Three Brothers" and "Young Hero"
Joseph Starbuck (1831-1851)
Ships
"Hero", "Omega", "President", Rose", "Three Brothers" and "Young Hero"
Levi
Starbuck (1833-1846)
Ships "Elizabeth Starbuck", "James Loper", "Levi
Starbuck" and "Zone"
Matthew Starbuck (1837)
Ship "Three Brothers"
Obed
Starbuck (1851-1855)
Ship "James Loper"
Simeon Starbuck (1825-1847)
Ships "Eagle", "Rose" and "Young Eagle"
Flag vertically divided
blue-white-blue.
In 1861, the town learned the death of the island's
wealthiest citizen, Joseph Starbuck, in the "Inquirer". Born in 1774, Starbuck
owned the whaleships "President", "Hero", "Omega", "Three Brothers", "Loper" and
"Young". They made over fifty voyages, bringing back more than eighty thousands
barrels of oil valued at an estimated $2.5 million. In 1838, Joseph Starbuck
built the last whaler constructed in Nantucket and named it after himself: the
"Joseph Starbuck".
In 1836, Starbuck hired Christopher Capen to build three
brick homes on Main Street for his sons, William, Matthew and George. New
architectural icons that illustrate the magnitude of wealth that whaling brought
to Nantucket, the homes, nicknamed, "The Three Bricks", are of transitional
Federal-Greek Revival style. A departure from the plain Quaker homes the island
was accustomed to and a symbol of Starbuck's wealth, the large
two-and-a-half-story residences were bigger and more stylish than any other
homes in Nantucket.
[Amy Jenness. On this day in Nantucket history. The
History Press, 2014]
Obed Starbuck (1797-1882) was the son of Levi
Starbuck, and the nephew of Joseph Starbuck and Simeon Starbuck.
In 1819,
Obed was a mate aboard the ship "Hero". It was during this voyage that while
lying in at St. Mary's off the coast of Chile, the ship was captured by the
pirate Benevedes and taken to Aranco; Obed was imprisoned in his cabin. A brig
sailed into the area and Benevedes believed it to be a government vessel. He
slipped the "Hero's" cables, thinking the ship would go ashore, and then left
the crew locked up while he rowed to shore with Captain James Russell and one of
the crew. Obed, aware the ship was abandoned, broke down the door and freed the
crew. Taking command, Obed sailed the ship to Valparaiso, escaping from
Benevedes' men. When the authorities learned of the situation, they sent a ship
to take the pirates. At this time, Benevedes was in a rage over the escape of
the crew with the ship. He then killed Captain Russell and the boy. While in
Valparaiso, Obed came upon Captain George Pollard and a few of the survivors of
the whaleship "Essex" that had been stoved by a whale. News of the two disasters
preceded the vessels arrival home. On August 1821, the ship "Hero", commanded by
Obed, in the company of the ship "Two Brothers", on which Captain Pollard was
passenger sailed around Brandt Point where upwards of 2,000 people welcomed Obed
and the survivors of the "Essex" home. Obed was rewarded with command of the
"Hero" on her next voyage.
Captain Obed Starbuck was given command of the
"Hero" on her 1822-1824 voyage. During this voyage, he discovered an island
southwest of the Sandwich (Hawaiian) Islands, which he called New Nantucket
(later changed to Baker Island). On this same voyage, Captain Starbuck charted
another island and named it Starbuck Island. He returned home to Nantucket from
this voyage with 2,173 barrels of sperm oil.
Simeon Starbuck (1765-1850)
was the brother of Joseph Starbuck and the uncle of Obed Starbuck
http://www.prospecthillcemetery.com/milestones - Histories of Persons
Interred at Prospect Hill Cemetery
Ivan Sache, 2 February 2019