In the 1989 reprint of the Coffee County Cemetery Book, a note was added for B. H. Tanner. NOTE: In February of 1989, the headstone of B. H. Tanner (not his remains) was relocated in the Camp Ground Cemetery in Alma, Georgia. This was done by family descendants so his headstone would be next to that of his first wife, and the mother of his children. He had no children by his second wife. His remains were not moved. An additional page was added, after page 473, containing a hand-written note listing the inscriptions on the tombstones of Eliza and B. H. Tanner. The page also contains a photo of the markers. It starts off "B. H. Tanner grave moved from Old Ward Cemetery in a field on Was (sic) Tanner farm to Camp Ground Cemetery near Alma, Ga. Relocated Feb. 1989." Now, back to the other problem. When I saw the tombstone in Camp Ground, located northwest of Alma, and was told by a descendant that as far as he knew, B. H. was still in the Ward Cemetery, I was confused. I still am. I probed the area in front of the tombstone in Camp Ground, hoping to prove that the earth had or had not been dug, to bury some remains of B. H. When I probed, I struck cement, about six inches below the surface. It appeared to be the top of a vault. I suppose it could have been a slab, that had sunk over the years. Previously, I have found slabs, buried several inches below the surface, with inscriptions on them. I don't have any intentions of going down there to unearth whatever it is, but I sure am curious about what or who it is. Clyde