I've posted several memorials to Find A Grave and have taken a few pictures for requesters. My submissions aren't nearly as vast as that of others, however. I do snap pics in the cemeteries, then check to see if there's a memorial on Find A Grave, if not, I post one. If there is one with no pic, I add my photo. I, too, went to the cemetery on November 1st. It was a bit overcast, no hot sun beating during the Archbishop's mass at Lake Lawn Metairie, but by the end of it, I was awfully hot, so hot that I curbed my grave visits to just a few and plan to go out another day. I've found lots of wonderful F-A-G memorials for New England ancestors, less so for the Louisiana folk. I found a whole mess of Rhode Island cousins buried in Providence County on Find A Grave, which thrilled me to no end. As I do family research, and find where people are buried, I enter them on F-A-G if there is not already a memorial, even if I don't have a picture of the grave. I figure if we all do our part, entering a little at a time, we may cover a lot of territory that way. Alexa Genealogy research since 1975 -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] Subject: Re: [LAORLEAN] Cemeteries around Jackson Ave in 1869 I love the F-A-G site and use it often, but no luck in this particular case. I doubt they could afford markers. I was thinking a potters field, or other mass burial site, with the epidemic. Charity records don't seem to have the ones I am looking for either. I seem to have more success on Find-a-grave with small towns in the mid-west than with N.O. cemeteries on that site. Is this just my experience? Or do others have good luck with New Orleans records?