Hello Howard, It surely seems that this is indeed the very same land your ancestor donated for a cemetery all those years ago. If we only had a time machine to go back and talk to those old folks. The more I read others' research here, the more amazed I am of the familial and neighborly relationships there. What a shame that we don't have ALL the gravestones we need to tie loose ends together, or records to firm up our strong hunches. I do hope, however, that some more astute researchers than I am have some of those notes on those early Burches, Lowery/Lowereys, and McHenrys that will help complete the pictures there. My dad told me of the old schoolhouse which stood near the crossroads, but I have not found it on old atlases yet. Another cousin wrote that my g-grandmother, Rebecca Warren Wiley, who moved there from Ohio in 1860, was one of the first school teachers there. Also, I recall Dad telling me, even showing me, where the old store/post office stood, near the cross roads, Ed Yoho's store, where my grandad worked when he was too old to farm any more. I mention all this with the hope that it might encourage some others with memories and family stories of the area to share them, and maybe we can patch this puzzle together again. jim