Serendipitous:
Lucky in making unexpected and fortunate discoveries.
Serenity: State of calmness, quietness,
stillness, peace.
I
don’t know about you, but I have always found cemeteries interesting. From ancient
moss-covered and mostly unreadable headstones in old English churchyards to the
Gothic splendour of Highgate Cemetery in London, the resting place amongst
other notables of singer George Michael and Karl Marx, author of The Communist
Manifesto, cemeteries can be places of calmness, quietness, stillness,
and peace. I make no apologies for the use of a bit of alliteration in the
title, as the two brief definitions perfectly describe my recent visit to cemeteries in Victoria, Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
Ross Bay Cemetery |
I have visited Victoria several times, and this trip finally made it to Christ Church Cathedral, which deserves its own post. Beside the Cathedral is the Old Burying Ground, and my friend and I picked up a cemetery map showing the various memorials. We toured through the cemetery, stopping at the Historical Marker installed in 1958 to commemorate the centennial of the Fraser River Gold Rush, which has the history of the Old Burying Ground carved onto it.
As fascinating as each tomb and obelisk was, we were both impressed with the Tombstone Group. The City of Victoria cleared the Old Burying Ground in 1908, leaving some stones in place. One tomb still standing is for Hannah Estes, a black woman born into slavery in Missouri who died in Victoria in 1868. My friend and I were intrigued by Hannah’s story.
Hannah's headstone |
Smooth sailing |
Victoria Chatham
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/salt-spring-island-estes-stark-1.7115501
https://www.saltspringarchives.com/Estes_Stark_Family/