Jack: I have not read the article. The boulder and arch memorial are at Camp Chase cemetery. There were, I think about 2,260 confederate burials there, although some were removed to the south. Johnson's Island has 206 stones and David Bush says there are 50-52 unknown graves. One guy has, or had, two stones. It also has a Confederate Memorial. All can be seen in pictures on the web. Another good site... http://home.thirdplanet.net/lsrssw/ Dave Bush can be contacted at dbush@mail.heidelberg.edu about Johnson's Island. One other interesting note is that the island was a resort area before the turn of the century with big pavillion, etc. There are also houses on the other end. The cemetery, on a small part of the island, is still totally in tact and the federal portion of Fort Johnson, although gone, is probably the best example of a true fort area in the US. Everything below ground is undisturbed and this what they have been working on with some great finds. You can not get onto the rest of the island without permission, although unless you're looking underground it all looks alike. Camp Chase on the other hand is just a cemetery downtown Columbus on the site of. That girl must really have her story screwed up because to my knowledge there is no boulder on the island. She has to be talking about Camp Chase. Let me know if you find one, but you won't. Jon Andrews >From: Jb502000@aol.com >Reply-To: INPCRP-L@rootsweb.com >To: INPCRP-L@rootsweb.com >Subject: [INPCRP] Re: article >Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 22:28:15 EST > >In a message dated 1/16/02 5:17:42 PM US Eastern Standard Time, >sianoil@hotmail.com writes: > > > > . I've been to > > both cemeteries several times and was there when they did a dig on > > Johnson's > > Island. > >Jon, > On the Issue of Johnsons Island in Ohio, did you read the article >in >the Akron Beacon Journal. The Lady Reporter, Fran, said she was amazed when >she saw carved on a large boulder on the Island that 2,300 confederate >soilders were buried there.. I believe you, but where did she come up with >such a number. And on what Boulder on the Island. I went to the Johnson >Island web site and never saw that mentioned. What's happened. I'll be in >Ohio in March, I think I'll go visit the cemetery. > >Jack Briles >jb502000@aol.com > > >==== INPCRP Mailing List ==== >THIS IS A CEMETERY ----- > "Lives are commemorated - deaths are recorded - families >are reunited - memories are made tangible - and love is >undisguised. This is a cemetery. > "Communities accord respect, families bestow reverence, >historians seek information and our heritage is thereby enriched. > "Testimonies of devotion, pride and remembrance are carved >in stone to pay warm tribute to accomplishments and to the life - >not the death - of a loved one. The cemetery is homeland for family >memorials that are a sustaining source of comfort to the living. > "A cemetery is a history of people - a perpetual record of >yesterday and sanctuary of peace and quiet today. A cemetery >exists because every life is worth loving and remembering - always." > --Author unknown -- Seen at a monument dealer in West Union, IA > _________________________________________________________________ Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp.