Dear Munson Cuzn.... You wrote: >>>>>>Message Board Post: I am at a loss.Trying to find info on Johnson Warner and Abigail Munson Warner. They came to Medina Co. between 1820 and 1830 with her parents Hermon and Anna Munson from Warerbury, Ct. Some of their children came, my ancestor Horace was one. They went between Medina and Lorain Co., but I believe they are buried in Medina. Lorain says they have no record. I found Abigail's parents and sisters graves in Medina. I would like to find graves and info on his parents in Ct. Do you think you could help? Thank you in advance. Shelle Amato ----- I hope by now you've read Nira B. Northrup's "A Pioneer History of Medina County," which includes info on Herman. As I recall he was one of the area's oldest citizens and quite a character. The Warners are an old Medina/Connecticut line, as I'm sure you know; Re Graves...It's possible that they were buried at Indian Point Cemetery, over looking Rocky River in Weymouth...(information follows) Re your lineage...you are a descendant of Thomas Munson..I suggest you visit the Thomas Munson Foundation website at http://www.thomas-munson.org Hit the button marked Genealogy and you'll see that this is a very organized family! And be sure to sent and email to family historian herb Munson at [email protected] PRODIGY.NET Herb send me my entire line on hard copy. ---Shirley Hulett 4 Gr grandaught of James Munson Cook of Wallingford CT and Medina 5 gr grandaughter of Sybyl MUNSON of New Haven, Waterberry, and Wallingford CT --------------------- Indian Point Cemetery, Weymouth located in the vicinity of S. Weymouth Rd. & Rt. 3 Is now private land and no longer maintainee as a cemetery...I've been uable to find out who owns it or whether any tombstones remain. Donna Gruber, a member of this list, found the cementery on an 1858 Medina map on the wall of the Medina County Historical Society. (Donna was one of the dedicated volunteers working on the GenWeb "lost cemeteries"project.) >From 1881 Medina chapter from an Ohio history published by Baskin & Battey, page 214. Indian Point was the burial site of early pioneers and prior to that apparently a fortification built by Mound Indians. The Indians built 3 mounds, apparently as fortification with adjacent trenches. Townsmen dug a road through the mounds to the point so they could transport the dead by wagon. The text says "Early settlers of the township thought this high point of land, this old fortification a super place for burying-ground, and it was used for this purpose for some years; a few of the brownstone slabs still stand reminders of the pioneer whites who dispossessed the red man of this territory which had once sported the semi-civilized Mound Builders. To get at this cemetery, a road was cut through the center of the three embankments."