RootsWeb.com Mailing Lists
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    1. Re: [INPCRP] Granville Cemetery & the DHPA and DNR.
    2. Rich Green
    3. Hey Ernie, The Board of Health might not be a bad idea in this case. LA was cleaning stones out there the other day and she allowed as how some of the inscriptions provided cholera as the cause of death. I'm not sure which diseases lie dormant in the grave and which don't, but I suppose exposure to the remains could be a health hazard? Regards, Rich Green Historic Archaeological Research 4338 Hadley Court West Lafayette, IN 47906 Office: (765) 464-8735 Mobile: (765) 427-4082 www.har-indy.com ----- Original Message ----- From: Ernie & Connie Lasley To: INPCRP-L@rootsweb.com Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 7:32 PM Subject: Re: [INPCRP] Granville Cemetery & the DHPA and DNR. I doubt the DNR or the DHPA will be concerned over the exposed human remains, they will just refer you to your local Board of Health or Department of Health. That was the reply I received concerning a new burial in an old Pioneer Cemetery. At 09:47 PM 04/05/2006, you wrote: >UEB, > >Thanks for the info. >I did report this to DHPA today, so they are aware of the exposed >human remains. We'll have to see how this plays out. > >Thanks again, > >Rich Green ==== 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

    04/06/2006 01:45:14
    1. Re: [INPCRP] Granville Cemetery & the DHPA and DNR.
    2. Ernie & Connie Lasley
    3. We had discussed health hazards in these old graves before, and no one really came up with a good answer. In the Katrina aftermath there were some concerns over old graves and above ground vaults that were washed out in the storm. From Joshua Slocum, National Director of the Funeral Consumers Alliance (FCA): "I sincerely doubt there is anything left of those bodies after all these years besides a few bones. Disease microbes, as far as I know, reside in the soft tissue, which has long, long since gone away. Besides, with rare exceptions (such as the prions that cause mad cow disease), disease dies with the body, or shortly after death. Disease-causing bacteria and viruses don’t somehow hole up and go dormant for years in corpses, waiting to be reawakened" And from Dr. Joseph Guarisco, chairman of the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans: “. . . dead bodies should not be a disease concern to the public. Let’s just make it real clear: Dead bodies in and of themselves ­ while they are mental health issues and tragic ­ they are not a public health issue from an infectious disease standpoint at all.” So this may answer the lingering question about cholera and the plagues remaining dormant for years in graves??? I don't know if that would be enough to ease my mind if exposed to the remains. I think I would still take precautions. At 06:45 PM 04/06/2006, you wrote: >Hey Ernie, > >The Board of Health might not be a bad idea in >this case. LA was cleaning stones out there the >other day and she allowed as how some of the >inscriptions provided cholera as the cause of >death. I'm not sure which diseases lie dormant >in the grave and which don't, but I suppose >exposure to the remains could be a health hazard? > >Regards, > >Rich Green

    04/06/2006 02:35:28
    1. Re: Health Concerns
    2. Rich Green
    3. Ernie, I don't know much about this subject at all; although, it seems as though I read somewhere that there were certain illnesses that could be caused by handling material from graves and dead bodies. I probably didn't save it because it's not something I'm likely to be involved with often, but if I can find it again It's send you a copy. Regards, Rich Green Historic Archaeological Research 4338 Hadley Court West Lafayette, IN 47906 Office: (765) 464-8735 Mobile: (765) 427-4082 www.har-indy.com ----- Original Message ----- From: Ernie & Connie Lasley To: INPCRP-L@rootsweb.com Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 9:35 PM Subject: Re: [INPCRP] Granville Cemetery & the DHPA and DNR. We had discussed health hazards in these old graves before, and no one really came up with a good answer. In the Katrina aftermath there were some concerns over old graves and above ground vaults that were washed out in the storm. From Joshua Slocum, National Director of the Funeral Consumers Alliance (FCA): "I sincerely doubt there is anything left of those bodies after all these years besides a few bones. Disease microbes, as far as I know, reside in the soft tissue, which has long, long since gone away. Besides, with rare exceptions (such as the prions that cause mad cow disease), disease dies with the body, or shortly after death. Disease-causing bacteria and viruses don't somehow hole up and go dormant for years in corpses, waiting to be reawakened" And from Dr. Joseph Guarisco, chairman of the Department of Emergency Medicine at the Ochsner Clinic Foundation in New Orleans: ". . . dead bodies should not be a disease concern to the public. Let's just make it real clear: Dead bodies in and of themselves ­ while they are mental health issues and tragic ­ they are not a public health issue from an infectious disease standpoint at all." So this may answer the lingering question about cholera and the plagues remaining dormant for years in graves??? I don't know if that would be enough to ease my mind if exposed to the remains. I think I would still take precautions. At 06:45 PM 04/06/2006, you wrote: >Hey Ernie, > >The Board of Health might not be a bad idea in >this case. LA was cleaning stones out there the >other day and she allowed as how some of the >inscriptions provided cholera as the cause of >death. I'm not sure which diseases lie dormant >in the grave and which don't, but I suppose >exposure to the remains could be a health hazard? > >Regards, > >Rich Green ==== INPCRP Mailing List ==== "Show me your cemeteries, and I will tell you what kind of people you have." Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790)

    04/06/2006 03:49:37