There is a Calvary Cemetery in Queens. Perhaps the word that you can't read is city for New York City or just the abbreviaiton cmty. I found an ancestor of mine who had died in Hudson County being buried at the Lutheran Cemetery in Middle Village, Queens. The family had come from Manahattan and already had a cemetery plot in which many of their infant children were buried. Perhaps the situation here is that if James died before the rest of the family, there was not plot and he was buried with other family. Gail Benson Researching in Hudson: Braham, Lawless, English, Lambert, Schiesser --- Thomas Novak <Thomas.Novak1@prodigy.net> wrote: > I need help tracking down a cemetary. The person I > am interested in is > James F. Casey, who died August 7, 1902 in St. Marys > Hospital, Hoboken New > Jersey and his home was 321 Mountain Road in West > Hoboken, Hudson County, > New Jersey. The place of burial was listed as > "Calvary XXXX", where the > last word is unreadable. It looks like it might > start with a "C" or an "A" > and end with an "ly", but like I said it was > unreadable. > > The only cemetaries through the various web sites > with cemetary listing I > could find in New Jersey that started with Calvary > was a Babtist cemetary, > but that wouldn't do because he was Catholic. > > Does anyone know of a cemetary around the turn of > the century who's name > started with "Calvary" and went out of business? > > This might clear up a mystery for me, as his wife > and most of his children > were buried about much later at the same plot in > Holy Name Cemetary in > Jersey City, but I have always been mystified where > he was buried. > > Tom Novak > > > ==== NJHUDSON Mailing List ==== > Visit the Hudson County N.J. GenWeb page at: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~njhudson/ > __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail - Free email you can access from anywhere! http://mail.yahoo.com/