For those researching the Henry family, I thought this was interesting: -Newspaper Article: McNairy County Independent (Friday, 18 May 1934) Celebration of Memorial Days. Liberty-19th District. The annual memorial and Mother's Day was observed at old Liberty, northeast of Bethel Springs, on Sunday, May 13. The event is an annual one, and many people attend each year. The old church building is torn down but the exercises were held in the beautiful grove just to the south of the old church site. Not far away is the old burying ground laid out before the days of the Civil War. There are many old graves in the plot of ground. We noticed on the gravestones the name of John Plunk, born in 1800, and Elizabeth, his wife, in 1796. Then there are the names of Rev. John Wesley Plunk and wife; E. J. Plunk, the former born in 1842, and dying in 1920; the latter born in 1844, and dying in 1921. We notice the grave of a daughter of John and Elizabeth Plunk. She was born February 10, 1833. Wm Henry, a pioneer, sleeps in the cemetery. He was born in 180! 0 and died about 40 years ago. An interesting bit of history clings to the old graveyard. In it rest the remains of five Union soldiers, Alex, Miles and J. W. Plunk, Lee Tacker and Newt Rose, and five Confederate soldiers, Robert Walker, Noah Hill, Jim Yarborough, Rev. John Henry and John R. Barham. The latter was the father of J. E. and C. L. Barham, prominent citizens of the north part of the county. This old soldier was in the battle of Shiloh. It will be observed that in another old cemetery, Rosehill, just a short distance to the south lie the remains of an old Revolutionary soldier. Jerry D. Duncan