Friday, December 18, 2015

Anniversary of Sir Thomas Jackson’s Death



Sir Thomas JACKSON: June 4, 1841- December 21st, 1915

High on a hill, about a fifteen minute walk from the local market town of Crossmaglen, is an old farm known as Urker. The future Sir Thomas Jackson grew up here with his mother Eliza, father David, nine brothers and sisters, and dozens – if not hundreds - of cherished neighbours and relations. By the time that he was born, the farm at Urker had been leased by the Jacksons from various landlords for three generations.

This shows the extent of the buildings at Urker Lodge after years of additions - many made possible because of money sent home from Hong Kong. It was well kept up until the late 1970s.
As a boy, Thomas accompanied his father and older brother to the Crossmaglen market where they sold cattle, horses, pigs, potatoes and turnips. It was there that he learned the basics of a good deal - all sides must feel as if they had won. This experience was part of what helped him to become one of the most successful international bankers of his time. He approached banking as a farmer would: Plan for times of scarcity. Feed the workers. Don’t export profits. Reinvest. In a word, stewardship. In the mid to late 1800s, when he was the Chief Manager of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, now known as HSBC, his family always referred to the bank as The Old Cow. Had it not been for his efforts, it would never have survived to see the 20th century, let alone the 21st.

A view in the 1930s. The clock donated by Sir Thomas Jackson is visible on the face of the dormer near the top of the Market House.
There is a tale told about Thomas that happened in 1850, when he was nine years old, and was out walking with Robert Lindsay Mauleverer, a local land agent. Why were they walking together? What did they talk about? We don’t know. We do know, from court cases, that Mauleverer had recently served papers to confiscate Thomas’ parents’ cattle. The echo effects of the famine were still being felt, and like many, Thomas’ father had been unable to pay their rent. During this walk, a gypsy approached and offered to tell their fortune. Mauleverer paid her a coin, and she studied their open palms in turn. Her prophecy was: One of you will be known all over the world and one of you will meet a dastardly death.

Days later, on May 23, Mauleverer was murdered as he was being driven to the Cullaville Train Station. That was not the only part of the gypsy’s prophecy which came to pass. By the late 1800s, Thomas Jackson had become so famous that Prince Henry of Prussia, one of Jackson’s friends, made a bet that he could send a letter addressed simply as TJ, China, and that it would get there as quickly as any fully addressed letter ever could. He won his bet.

Before Jackson left for Hong Kong for the first time in 1864, at age twenty three, he received a blessing from Old Rose, his Catholic nanny. His mother, Eliza, said of this blessing:

But you had the blessing of a holier woman than ever I was. Do you remember old Rose’s dying words, “My blessing go with you Tommy Jackson”? So it did by land and by sea.
We still do not know Rose’s last name, although Mary Cumiskey did find mention of her in an oral history recording:

But this oul woman that used to nurse Jackson before he went to China, or was fit to go - she went dark (blind) an' he used to lift the beads for her an' I mind them sayin' that every Sunday he would bring her down the Monug Road - that's a back way to Jackson's - to Mobane. He'd take her down this road, they sayed, till she be to hear the bell ringin' in Mobane Chapel30 an' she'd say her beads there. Jackson was out in Shanghai - isn't that in China - this time an' he was great for charity. But wherever this boat was goin' he stayed back to give out this charity to these poor Chinese at the corner an' they were callin' to him from the boat to come on, but it seems he took no heed of them. Now, he was a great man for charity. But the boat was lost anyhow with all hands. Jackson said it was this oul woman's prayers that saved him. Mary Daly of Crossmaglen

I assume that Old Rose died in 1864, possibly sometime in August, just before Jackson left Ireland for the first time, although she may have died somewhat earlier.

The strongest influence on the development of Thomas Jackson’s sense of morality is usually thought to be his mother, Eliza Oliver, a strict covenant Presbyterian. There is no doubt of her considerable influence, but another influence which wasn’t known of, until some recently discovered letters, was his great-aunt Barbara Donaldson, widow of William Donaldson of Freeduff. William was the chief organizer of the United Irishmen in South Armagh in the late 1700s. He died decades before Thomas was born, but his widow and Thomas enjoyed an ongoing correspondence which included spirited discussions about all sorts of political and moral issues. Most of these letters have been lost, but the one that he wrote to her at the end of the day when he first arrived in Hong Kong has survived.

I arrived at my destination this morning at 8.0.C and commenced operations in
my new harness at 9:30. The Mail leaves this evening at 6.0.C and I will only have time
to write a short letter -  
Thomas Jackson to Barbara Donaldson January 14, 1865

This “short” letter then went on for another three pages. Thankfully, the Jacksons also saved two of Barbara’s husband’s letters. They give us some of the ethical context of Thomas’ childhood:

In your letter to Jno. Stitt you have mentioned the quantity of animals hides appropriated to the use of flogging the unfortunate Africans!!!  Your account exhibits a melancholy spectacle of the depravity of Human Nature.  If you consider that God is the essence of Goodness and that his presence pervaded the immensity of space it is the most daring effrontery to commit such horrid crimes in his presence, and to think of meeting him in future with these cruel outrages staring us in the face – Monsieur Le Vallant who travelled in the interior of Africa for 5 years, and consequently had an opportunity of knowing the language, customs and manners of these children of Nature, describes them as a generous and hospitable race of man, when their manners has not been contaminated by having intercourse with the whites; on the contrary near the seacoasts when they have intercourse with the Europeans they are mean and degenerated. William Donaldson 27th February 1811.


In Jackson’s own account of his life, the mentor that he referred to most often was his uncle, the Rev. Daniel Gunn Browne, a Presbyterian minister who was active in the Co. Armagh land reform movements of the mid-1800s, and who worked with Father Michael Lennon, the Catholic parish priest from Crossmaglen, to insist on the rights of tenant farmers and the responsibilities of landlords. Browne was interrogated in 1852 by the Crime and Outrage Committee, when Thomas was eleven years old, and was asked if he had ever referred to landlords as exterminators. He testified that he had. Even though he was a Presbyterian, his headstone is one of the tallest still standing in the Church of Ireland graveyard at Creggan. It was erected in his memory by Thomas Jackson, who had rushed home to be with Browne for his last few days.


The influence of this cultural background made Jackson unusual at a time when so much of the white culture in Hong Kong was colonial, and bigoted. His instincts were to bridge divides, in much the same way as many members of his Irish family had often done. After all, his grandfather, Benjamin Oliver, was one of those fifty or so Armagh Protestants in 1812 who had signed a Petition to ask the British Parliament to grant full voting rights to Catholics in both England and Ireland. Even though Thomas’ father receives little notice in accounts of his life, there are some ways in which it is probably fair to say: Like father, like son. About the same time as Thomas was working to include people of Chinese ancestry in local government posts, his father was one of those members of a local Orange Lodge who was actively supporting tenant rights for Catholics and Protestants alike:

The list of names I herewith submit are Protestants and Land Leaguers. They are the largest farmers here. They are men of the greatest integrity who would scorn to take bribes or bounties. They are Land Leaguers by their own free choice, because they know that the movement is a purely social one, whose aim and object is to undo injustice by constitutional means, and to enable them to live on their own lands by the sweat of their own face. Newry Reporter March 12, 1881

These interfaith aspects of Irish history are not well known, but given the extent of the Irish presence in mid-1800s Hong Kong, they cannot be ignored. One story that illustrates Thomas’ approach to race relations in Hong Kong is recounted by his daughter, Beatrice Marker:

My mother and I had had an enjoyable trip from England and on our last night before arriving at Hong Kong my mother thanked the Chief Officer for all his care and attention and asked him to dinner on shore the following night, as my father would not wish to lose any time in thanking him too.
We dropped anchor the next morning and as I came on deck a Chinese coolie woman crossed my path, where upon the Chief Officer took her by the shoulders and threw her so roughly out of my way that she lost her hat and her shoes. I was then aware of a raging 6 ft 2 tornado in the form of my father who seized the Chief officer by the scruff of the neck and as he shook him like a rat roared "How dare you treat a Chinese woman so, you something something..". I didn't wait to see the end but dived below and into the Wayfoong [a ship owned by HSBC] as quickly as I could, and needless to say the Chief Officer did NOT dine with us that night!

Having seeing firsthand the effects of the 1840s famine, Jackson was always one of the first to step up with an open wallet to fund good causes. He was jokingly referred to as beggar in chief. He not only supported fundraising for charitable causes in China, India, Hong Kong and Japan, but in 1880 – while he was still living and working in Hong Kong - he also served as an Honorary Treasurer for the Irish Famine Relief. In the 1890s in Hong Kong, when death from the plague was epidemic, he personally visited the crowded coolie tenements to see first-hand the conditions that they lived in. His subsequent recommendations to the Sanitation Board, on which he served in the 1890s, are a matter of record. Since the cause of the plague had yet to be discovered, his walking into the epicenter of the disease would be akin to walking into an Ebola-infected site today without latex gloves. It took guts.

Nor did he ever forget the people of Creggan Parish, even though he spent half his life living and working in Hong Kong. One of his donations is the stuff of legends: The Dummy Clock of Crossmaglen. In 1865, a wooden clock had been erected on the Market House by a landlord, Thomas Prideau Ball, in lieu of the functioning clock which had been promised. Jackson paid to have a proper clock installed in its stead, and on May 31st, 1903, its bells pealed out across the land. There is a nice symmetry to this. The lands belonging to Thomas Prideaux Ball had been seized in 1642 from the only other person from Creggan Parish to be knighted: Sir Henry O’Neil, a Catholic.

A local poet, writing in the 1900s, claimed that the clock’s bell could be heard as far as Carrickmacross in Co. Monaghan, to the west; Newry in Co. Down, to the north; and Dundalk in Co. Louth to the east. Such stories may stretch credulity, since we are talking of a twelve mile radius here, but they do give a sense of the importance of this clock, both practical and symbolic. Also, according to local lore, true or not, the Jackson clock was made of gold and silver. Unfortunately, the Market Place building was blown up in July 1974 by some young British soldiers who feared that it was being used as an arms depot by the IRA, and all that remains of Jackson’s clock is the bell. On September 1, 1989, Cardinal Tómas Ó Fiaich, a man who was well known for his support of Irish nationalism but not of the violence that others endorsed, blessed the remnants of the bell when it was reinstalled in the Crossmaglen library, the place where the Market House once stood.

We can only guess at the extent of all of Jackson’s private gifts to people in need – in both Ireland and Hong Kong, but they were extensive enough to trigger criticism from both his wife and his mother. When he came home on visits to Urker, and visited the old Market Square, the children would cluster around him as he tossed sovereigns in the air. He also saw to the needs of their parents, many of whom worked on the Jackson farms. Mary Anne Hearty recalled:
Sir Thomas liked to visit the families of his workers. In 1912, he called with Mary Ann's mother (she then lived up the Claranagh Road) and he said: "Marian, this house is getting too small for your family. We will build you a house at the cross-roads and we will call it `John's Rock' ". The rent was agreed at 1 penny per week. He there and then went to see Keenans, builders, gave them the contract and the house was ready in a year. That year, 1912, was his last visit to Urker. …
During that same visit, he also donated money to the Forkhill Trust to help build schools in Creggan, and became a member of the County Louth Archaeological Society. He made the second largest donation to a fund enabling them to buy part of Robert Day's valuable collection of antiquities, and to prevent these significant specimens of Ireland’s earliest national art from leaving the country. Only John Crichton-Stuart, 4th Marquess of Bute, donated more.  Pieces of the collection are still on display at the Dundalk County Museum. It wasn’t his only such donation to preserve Ireland’s history.

His generosity to the funds of Dun Dealgan [commonly known as "Castletown Mount," the presumed birthplace and home of Cuchullain] was marked, and he was never appealed to in vain for assistance in any of the undertakings of the Society.
Journal of the County Louth Archaeological Society, Vol. 3, No. 4 (Nov., 1915), p. 416

In the early 1900s, the old family farm at Urker continued to be managed for Thomas by his sister Mary Griffin after their mother and his younger brother (another HSBC banker) died in 1903. He would have gladly returned home, and lived out the rest of his life there, but his wife - Amelia Lydia Dare - desired the comforts of electricity, and indoor toilets. Understandably. Her choice was for them to retire to a large house at Stansted, in England.


Even though Thomas lost a good deal of his mental acuity in the last few years of his life, and was known to be querulous, the staff at HSBC still maintained an office for him, and the younger bankers continued to value him as a much respected elder. He died quietly in his office, at Gracechurch Street in the City of London on December 21st, after lunch.
 
The day on which he died used to be known and celebrated as the feast day of St Thomas, a day for the poor to go door to door collecting gifts of money or food. It was a suitable day for this particular Thomas to breathe his last. A final letter, out of the dozens of his letters that have survived, is one which he wrote the night before he died. It was to his sister Elizabeth, my great-grandmother:

I did not like to let a Xmas go by without sending something. It would not do to break an old custom. You know I am a good conservative. I am sure all will accept the little gift with my love…. This promises to be a very severe winter if we are to judge by the way it has begun in the North of Europe, it will press hard upon poor people.

This was not just idle cant. This was part of his heart and soul. One of his nieces, Kathleen Major, recalls a conversation with him, late in his life, during a weekend visit at Stansted:

[TJ] Ireland is a land of small houses and big hearts.
[KM] ….What a lovely place this is!
[TJ] I’d rather have Urker.
[KM] Really, Uncle, how could you compare the two? Urker is a small house with many inconveniences.
[TJ] It’s not the size that matters, it’s where one’s roots are.
A lone Celtic Cross at the graveyard at Stanstead. Thomas' grave.

Sunday, December 13, 2015

A Tree Came Down


Yesterday, part of a cedar tree snapped off during gale force winds, and then flew a good hundred feet downhill before landing one inch short of our cottage. The part that broke off was forty feet long. It came from the top of a tree which is in the clump of trees shown in the upper middle of this shot - just to the left of our house.




It landed here. The handrail has been knocked sideways.
Several aspects to this  have us shaking our heads. First of all, both of us were at home at the time but neither of us heard it happen. Secondly, it had to have flown a good fifty feet downhill, and then pivoted mid-air. Since all the protruding branches faced away from the cottage, it missed the cottage by mere inches.

 It must have landed butt side down, and then pivoted under the stairs. 
This section of the stairs were levered up about a foot by the trunk of the tree. On the left hand side beneath the stairs is a white electrical cable that connects to the cabin. There must have been just enough give or slack so that it didn't snap. The butt end initially landed in a hole which is about two inches away from the water line.

Andreas' hand gives a sense of scale of the trunk.
A view from the side.
Beneath it all is a lawnmower - unscathed, and a boat which also seems to be intact.
At our feet, it looks more like spring than winter.
Zsuzsi's rocks remained in place in spite of sixteen foot tides and gusts of up to 110km. Go figure.

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Kane Graveyard - Some History


If the so-called luck of the Irish does exist, and I believe it does, it is because of Irish generosity. For a long time, I had wanted to visit Kane graveyard, but I was only able to finally visit it because Eugene Lynch had offered to drive me there – after his wife had fed us both a substantial and excellent lunch. His offer of a ride was essential, because I could never have found this ancient burying place on my own. Even Eugene, who knows the area like the back of his own hand, had to stop, as we neared it, to ask if we were on the right track. We were. When we arrived, the sun broke through and the drizzle ceased. When it comes to luck, that was like the icing on the top of the cake.  


The earlier version of this post - which was inadvertently erased -  had another map that I made but which I can no longer find. Its description: The red arrow points to the graveyard. The green arrows indicate where many of those buried at Kane once lived. NOTE: Just found it:


Some of the information that has been handed down about this graveyard is based on folk tales, and some is from written records. I always enjoy the seasoning that the local stories add to the dustier versions found in history texts. A good starting place is the tale of the fairies at Kane. Jem Murphy’s version was first published in the Journal of The Creggan Local History Society in 1992. It was a retelling of an older tale, told about a hundred years earlier by Jem Callaghan. He had been working until after midnight at the kiln in Johnston's corn-mill in Ballsmill. John Johnston’s mill would have been about three kilometers north of Kane. The tale opens with the totally believable fact that Callaghan had been drying oats for the next day’s milling, and with his work done, he was simply walking home, as he usually would.

He was travelling north on the "Boher Mor" [aka the Big Road leading southeast to Dundalk] and coming near home when he met with a troop of fairies carrying a small coffin. When he met them, they left the coffin down by the roadside and told him they were going to Kane graveyard to bury one of their clan. They begged him to come with them and assist at the burial and he agreed.
When they restarted the journey the leader asked "Who'll carry the coffin?", the rest answered, "Who but Callaghan!", so Jem took the coffin on his shoulders and marched at the front of the cortege. When they arrived at Kane the leader directed them into the ruined church and pointed to the spot for Jem to leave down the coffin. He then inquired "Who'll say the Mass?", to which the rest replied "Who but Callaghan"! The Mass said; the leader asked, "Who'll dig the grave?". "Who but Callaghan" came the answer.

Note the call and refrain element of this story. It made such tales more likely to stick in people’s memories, and therefore more likely to be handed down from one generation to another.

When the burial was over the leader went behind the hedge and returned with white mare, he told Jem to mount and make for home, he would get "coin and livery" at the "Stump" the fairy told him.
He came home, tied the mare to the door porch went in, and went to bed. He got up in the morning and went out to see the mare. - - - "And what had I?" Jem would ask his listeners, "a broomstick with a bunch of feathers at one end of it! ". Some of his listeners. would ask Jem how he said the Mass. "How did I say it", he would answer "only the best way I knew how".

The Stump, where Callaghan was supposed to go to get his coin and livery, was an oval building about a kilometer southeast of the graveyard. The Irish name for Stump is Fas Na Haon Oidce. Its meaning, the work of one night, was also used in describing mushrooms, and perhaps there is a connection between the fairies and Stump. After all, a circle of mushrooms is often referred to as a fairy ring.

Stump photo from the collection of C.T. McCrea, and published in A Man Who Can Speak of Plants. E. Charles Nelson and Alan Probert.
In 1915, it took more than the work of one night to cart away the last of the remaining stones of Stump. It is likely that they ended up in several of the farm walls and buildings nearby. The thieving of stones had long been a losing battle. In the mid-1800s, Dr. Thomas Coulter (1793-1843), the famed naturalist and son of Samuel Coulter, had tried to stop people taking those stones. They were on his leased land, and he valued the Stump for its mysterious history. Even though he prosecuted some of the culprits – successfully - the practice of thieving the stones continued unabated.

The Coulters were not only successful farmers, but were also more educated than one might expect. Samuel Coulter owned an impressive personal library reflecting his eclectic interests in science, agriculture and literature. He also had an abiding interest in Irish culture, and had commissioned and published translations of old Irish tales. He wasn’t alone in this. There were several Presbyterians in the region in the late 1700s and early 1800s who were also passionate about saving Irish heritage. It is probable that some of Callaghan’s listeners would have known of the Coulters, their connection to the Stump, and also that many of their relations had been buried at Kane. After all, the memories of people in that time and place were both long and deep. 

Those listening to Callaghan’s tale would also have known about the souterrain or underground cave at Kane that dated back to about 1,200 BC. The wall that surrounds the graveyard was built over the opening to it. Its entry was on the right hand side of the current entrance gate. According to Harry Tempest of Dundalk, writing in the 1920's, it ran deep into and beneath the graveyard. A couple of decades earlier (1900), Fr. Larry Murray had also described this cave: in the east side of the churchyard, in the middle of which was a beautiful spring well; it is now closed

The parish of Kane was named for the legendary Cian Mac Cáint, who lived nearby at Killen Hill, another of the townlands leased by the Coulters in the 1700s. His story had been passed down long before the post-Cromwellian influx of farmers, such as the Coulters, had arrived from Scotland. As fate would have it, the story of Cian was one of the kinds of tales that Samuel Coulter, and men like him, would help to preserve both as the legend of The Death of the Sons of Tuireann, and in the poem written and sung by Peadar O Doirnin (1700-1769), a hedge school teacher from south Armagh: 

You'll have harp-music played with swift fingers
to wake you and love songs —
there is no fort as happy and full of fun
as the fair hill of Cian Mac Cáinte.

The earliest known record of some kind of Christian church at Kane was its mention in an ecclesiastical dispute in 1297. Typically, the fight was over the allocation of tithes. In Anglo-Norman records, the church was funded by what was called a prebend, meaning that the cathedral granted revenue to the minister as salary. That privilege seems to have lapsed in the 1500s, after the Reformation, and during the shift from Catholic to Protestant. A lot of the old churches went dark in this era.
Parts of these walls, surrounding both the church and the grave site, date back to the early 1700s.
When Rev. James Cubett arrived in 1692 as the Protestant curate of Kane, the church was in rough shape. Even though no clergyman had lived there since the Reformation, Cubett was expected to reside there. During his brief tenure, the church, dedicated to St. John, was totally rebuilt, and this time the reconstructed church lasted long enough for a successor to take over. A few remaining fragments, of what would have been an interior skim coat of plaster, indicate that the builders did their best to make it cozy, and to keep out the draft.

In 1699, Rev. Wm. Smith, who served the parishioners in Barronstown and Faughart, as well as Dunbin, was additionally given the responsibility for the Parish of Kane after Cubett had left. He preached and celebrated Divine Services there every Sunday. Not that his congregation would have been large. Even by 1766, there were still only 2 Protestant and 22 R.C. families living within the parish. It seems likely that some of the Protestants who lived nearby in the parishes of Barronstown, Castletown, Phillipstown, Roche, and the eastern part of Creggan also attended services at Kane. Their family residences are noted on many of the gravestones that remain.

It is hard to say how many years it took for that version of the rebuilt church to disappear. Not that there was much to cart away. Even in its heyday, the building was no larger than a typical thatched bungalow – about 50’ by 26’. When it comes to local archaeological pillaging, this would have been small potatoes. It was nowhere near as challenging as it had been for stone-stealers to remove the stones of Ireland's Stonehenge at nearby Carnbeg. Those stones, many of which were massive, had been carted away, in spite of the opposition of the Coulters. The local farmers who took such stones – and the ones from Carnbeg were as large as the ones at Stonehenge - probably prided themselves on being practical. As for the church at Kane, by the 1900s, only the bottom few feet of the walls were left.

I do not know at what point the graveyard became predominately (if not totally) a Presbyterian burial ground. It would have been after the influx of Scots Dissenters in the post-Cromwellian era. I also do not know when the Church of Ireland finally ceased to hold services there, but in 1786, the parish was permanently united with Barronstown. According to Noel Ross, who knows much more about the local history than I ever will, there is no subsequent record of the church at Kane ever being used as a place of worship for Presbyterians. By the 1800s, it was only being used for burials. Many of the dead came from townlands near the long-gone Presbyterian meeting house at Annaghvacky. Their families farmed there and at Carracloghan, Shortstone West, Cavananore, and Roche. Over time, they had prospered, and some of their sons had become merchants, lawyers, and doctors. Their occupations are noted on their gravestone inscriptions.

By the early 1970s, the graveyard became - once again - over-run with weeds, and saplings. The bushes got so tall that only the tips of the tallest of the markers could be seen in the sea of green. In 1974, the Faughart Historical Properties Preservation Society restored it, and ecumenical services were held intermittently during the following decades. Jane Bailie of Carraghcloghan (1903-1977) was the last to be buried, with her ancestral families, in the graveyard at Kane. Sometime after her burial, the weeds again took over, and in 2005, the site had to be reclaimed one more time. This last effort, at least, seems to have taken hold.

I am grateful for all those who have struggled over the years to protect this site, whether they were doing this work as government staff or as volunteers. Thanks also to Eugene Lynch for that magical afternoon visit in the spring of 2015. As a bonus, the two of us were joined by a very biblical kind of flock, one that I suspect is best suited to keeping the ever-lasting weeds at bay.

Sheep grazing around graves.


NOTE: This page was inadvertently erased – by me. This is my attempt to reconstruct what I had. March 1, 2016.  It isn't quite the same.
Update (thanks to Noel Ross): There is a detailed description of the souterrain at Kane in 'Five Louth Souterrains', CLAHJ, xix, 3, (1979), pp 206 - 217. Noel Ross was in the souterrain at the time it was surveyed. The dating of 1.200 B.C. is rather early, the generally accepted date range for souterrains is between 600 and 1,200 A.D.There is a short piece in Leslie’s Armagh Clergy and Parishes. It was never a Presbyterian place of worship. A meeting house at Annaghvacky for the Presbyterian congregation was opened in 1773. For details see Don Johnston’s article in the 2013 Journal of Co. Louth Archaelogical and Historical Journal, ‘Gaelic-Speaking Presbyterian Ministers of Dundalk/Ballymascanlan’. The map on p. 62 shows the location. Since there is no other graveyard in the area Kane was the obvious burial place.

PS A haunting guitar version of Peadar O Doirnin’s song can be heard at: Úrchnoc or The Fair Hill of Killen. It makes for a beautiful accompaniment to the photos of the grave markers.