JAMES PARKER: A Printer on the Eve of Revolution - Book due for release in April '08!
Gordon
This blog supplements the Common Bond Historians website, www.commonbondhistorians.com, as a place where we can share the most recent progress of our projects with our friends.

Rather than try to summarize myself here, check out my websites: www.CommonBondHistorians.com www.GardenStateLegacy.com

oon became apparent that we were dealing with a "double" marker! The whole other half was totally buried!
wly unearthed the second half. It is possible that this was the first sunlight to shine on it in many years. Once free from the muddy soil, we carefully turned it over in the hopes of finding an inscription, but there was none. In the vast majority of cases, when we do any digging, we are careful to put things back to ca
use as little disturbance as possible. In this case, however, it seemed reburying the other half would have been more disrespectful. So we raised the marker back to its uprighted position.We have seen similar "double" markers among 18th c. brownstones, usually associated with multiple deaths of children, mother and child during childbirth, etc. Without an inscription, of course, we can't say with certainty, but we suspect this unique marker reflects a similarly sad story.


