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Heritage week 2013 Historic Graves in Laois
1. 1
Laois Historic Graveyards
Project 2013
• John Tierney, Eachtra Archaeological Projects
• www.historicgraves.ie
• john @eachtra.ie 0872312107
• Funded by Laois Partnership and in association
with Laois County Council
• http://historicgraves.com/project/laois-graveyards-suTwitter
@historicgraves
Facebook
Historic Graves
4. The System (Recording)
1. Number each memorial (no number=no
photograph)
2. Photo with gps camera in strict numerical
sequence. Upload to website and create
memorial number
3. Do sketch plan
4. Fill in record sheets
5. Tick off progress on register sheet
6. File everything in folder in numerical
sequence
5. This register
is used to
keep track of
work in
progress; tick
the box when
the
headstone is
photograhed
and record
sheet is
complete
7. 1
23
4
Sequence for filling in
the record sheet
1 write in graveyard name, county, memorial
number, county initials and date
2 draw an outline of the grave memorial
3 write out the epitaph, letter for letter,
line for line
4 transfer all names in the epitaph, townland
name, dates and ages
8.
9. The System (Data Entry)
1. Create User Account
2. Login
3. Goto graveyard page eg.
http://historicgraves.com/graveyard/templetrine-graveyard/co-tmgy
4. Edit each grave memorial
5. Type in inscribed epitaph
6. Extract people info and ‘add person information’
7. Find person in census.archive.ie and add to Notes eg.
http://historicgraves.com/templetrine-graveyard/co-tmgy-0002/grave
10. Common elements
(learn the code)
• IHS
• In Hoc Signo Vinces
• Ecce Agnus Dei
• Gloria in Excelsis Deo
• Requiescat in Pace
• Requiescant in Pace
• Fecit (made by)
•Here lies the body of
•Erected by
•Sacred to
•Died/Departed
•The long S = f
•Month, Day, Year eg. March
4th
1826
•Day, Month, Year, eg. 4th
day
of March, 1826
•Ye - thorne
35. JOHN LAWLOR TO MY
GREAT SORROW IS DE
AD AND IN THIS NARR
OW GRAVE TAKES HIS
REST LET EVERY ONE
THAT READS THIS
PRAY GOD REST HIS
SOUL IN HEVEN AM
EN HE DYED APRIL YE
9TH 1716 AND IN YE 81
1yth YEAR OF HIS AGE
43. 43
Summary
• Email john@eachtra.ie if your community is interested in being one
of the 9 groups trained in September and October.
• Likely to commence mid September.
• Must have accessible historic graveyard
• Access to local hall (kettle and digital training)
• Commit to team of 6> to receive training
• 2 days per group plus further support
• Somebody on team who is comfortable with computers/internet
• Keen to tell and record stories of people and place through time
• Will get your graveyard surveyed and online
• Attend the November closing exhibition
43
Editor's Notes
Simply out, we number each grave memorial with masking tape and a marker. We then take one geotagged photo of each memorial in numbered sequence and upload this to the website. Instant publication is highly engaging for our volunteer groups – theys ee immediate results for their work. The geotagged grave memorial photo is then a hook that we can hang other media (audio and video stories) onto. We have become geolocated heritage media content publishers. Local people do the surveys, tell their stories and publish them to the web.
Our core technique is number photo record
We train people to use high tech cameras but also simple paper based registers. There is always a paper archive and communities must learn to manage these as community graveyards often involve repeat visits over a number of weeks or even months.
Blank sketch sheet. This template is used to draw a relative location plan for all numbered grave memorials. The solid lines represent rows of grave memorials.
Blank record sheet and the order in which we will fill in the details. All work is done in pairs for quality assurance.
The sketch plan is always complemented by contact prints of the photo survey and which are uploaded to the graveyard webpage.
Once the grave memorials are recorded we must then type the biographical data into the online database. First create a user account by clicking the SIgnup Online button on the front page. When you have a user account then use the login button at the bottom of each page. Once logged in you will see an Edit button for your own graveyards. Beginners should type in shorter inscriptions first with fewer people. Do a few short ones and then work your way up. If typing a very long inscription with more than 5 people listed we suggest you save after the third person. Then edit again.
Once you learn a number of key phrases reading headstones become straight forward.
An interesting pair of grave memorials were found side by side in Raheen. The simple inscribed cross could be very old but I suspect is more recent in execution. There is no medieval cross slab registered in Raheen on www.archaeology.ie .
The cast iron cross is made by mcCarthy Bros of Mountrath.
Here John shows us that the cross, while broken at the base, is still in fine condition. These cast iron Mountrath grave memorials are in very interesting Laois group.
Here local man Kevin lalor-Fitzgerald stands in front of the Lalor-Fitzgerald box tomb. Kevin’s family are related to the James Fintan Lalor who will be subject of an Inaugural School in September http://www.jamesfintanlalor.ie/
We recently spent on day with a team in the lovely graveyard of Old Sleaty.
If you travel north from Carlow town out the SLeaty road you will pass hte modern cemetery on the left, soon pass over a bridge and the Old Sleaty graveyard is in a field on your right. It is beautifully kept with approx 90 inscribed grave memorials.
A simple 18th century headstone erected by Elizabeth Church for her husband Joseph who died at the young age of 40. The Church surname is not found in the area today.
Old Sleaty has an interesting pair of Early medieval crosses but the variety of grave memorials is very interesting also. Ranging from a Commonwealth War Grave, some 18th century headstones to a very nice group of late 19th/20th century iron crosses. These iron crosses are decorated in a variety of interesting ways, reflecting a richer decorative tradition than we normally encounter.
Wrought iron work with a plain cross
but a decorate top. Are these ‘welded’ on?
A more conventional cross and ring, probably missing an inscribed tin plate.
A less conventional grave marker - looks like it is cobbled together from available pieces.
And simple but nicely cut and peeled decoration.
We started work with the small but dedicated group in Clopook and it is a fascinating place with tales of a Pooka, an Iron Age hillfort and a pond beyond the graveyard which looks as old as the hills.
A wide variety of grave memorials are found in Clopook and this O’Neil headstone is touching because of the reverse S. Every one is the wrong way around even though the stone is very well cut, dressed and decorated.
A nice high status group of table and box tombs.
A cast iron cross, no makers mark found, and painted silver.
With a barrel-chested crucified Christ. This motif is found across Europe from medieval times and I think it is fascinating to see it here in the medium of cast iron.
An interesting hood moulding early headstone. There are three of these in the graveyard and seem to be quite localised - it will be interesting to track their distribution during our training project in September.
And a double headed ledger slab with facing inscriptions. One for a priest and the other for his mother.
Son and reverend.
His mother?
Clopook also has an early group of mid 18th century ledger slabs - mostly for the high status Dunn family. We wondered if we could see both Catholic and Protestant headstones in the DUnn family. The tensions of penal laws are ften manifest in grave memorial decorations.
And perhaps the most well-known headstone in Clopook is this early round headed headstone for John Lawlor. The epitaph is not conventional.
Nor is the simple decoration. The lozenge shape is very unusual in an Irish context and we wonder if it has European parallels.
And inside the church we find an earlier ledger slab which predates the John Lawlor headstone.
It is a slab for Roger Moore Priest of this parish...
Roger Moore was born in 1640 and died in 1706.
A very strong ledger slab is found outside the south wall of the ruined church. It marks the Hacket family grave plot including the burial dates for two brothers, Edward and Andrew to died on the smae day in February 1838.
Paddy Lacey told us the story of the two young boys who died caught in a snowstorm in the winter of 1838. The boys may have been out in the snow to get some corn meal ground in a local mill and got caught in a blizzard on their way home. The crossroads where their bodies were found after the storm has two simple crosses marking their death and the crossroads has long been called Hackets cross. So the names on the ledge slab are connected to the crossroads 4 miles from their burial place.
Paddy, Raymond and Olive have bee trying to trace the Hackets of Clopook but they seem to have moved on before the time of Griffiths Valuation or did the family line die out? They believe they may know the family home place location.
For any groups interested in taking part in the www.laoispartnership.ie training programme next Sept and Oct please get in touch with John or Orla at Laois Partnership.