Shifting perspectives

Read time: 3 min.

I’ve driven past Salem Township’s Walnut Grove schoolhouse a thousand times, always from the front along County Road 500-South. From that angle, it’s one of the best-preserved schoolhouses in Delaware County! It wasn’t until I wandered back into nearby Saunders Cemetery that I noticed something I’d never seen before- a garage door cut right into the building’s rear wall. Who cares, right? Still, it was a reminder that sometimes all it takes is a shift in perspective to see a familiar landmark in an entirely new way. I suspect there’s a larger lesson to find, as well. 

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Delaware County Patriots: James Andrews

Read time: 5 min.

James Andrews’ name isn’t carved into a stone. No marker points to where he rests, and we can’t even say with confidence that he ever set foot in Delaware County. Fortunately, we can say he served. Thanks to the memories preserved by his sons -both of whom stepped forward in 1850 to testify to their father’s Revolutionary War service- we have just enough information to keep his story from slipping through the cracks. If we don’t speak Andrews’ name, claim him as Delaware County’s own, and share what little we know, then his chapter might fade into silence. 

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Searching for Bachelor Rolen

Read time: 5 min.

Sevier County, Tennessee, is dotted with more cemeteries than you can count. Each one seems tucked away in a bend of the road or hidden high on a hill! I didn’t bother with some of the bigger burial grounds when I was there, but what I found instead were the small, timeworn family plots scattered across the rolling countryside. Just before we left for home, my mom came across something intriguing: a driving tour that told the story of a local character known as Bachelor Archibald Rolen. Naturally, we couldn’t resist! We loaded up the truck and followed the winding directions into the hills. Were we successful in finding him? Well… it’s like this. 

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Delaware County Patriots: Robert Watkins

Read time: 6 min.

Some Revolutionary War stories burst with battlefield heroics, but others unfold quietly, carried by Patriots whose names history nearly forgot. Robert Watkins belongs to the latter group. His life was a long, winding journey through service in militias, frontier marches, and westward settlement. It’s one that would eventually stretch from the Carolina foothills to the early communities of Indiana.

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Delaware County Patriots: Thomas Thompson

Read time: 6 min.

Most Revolutionary War Patriots weren’t allowed to seek pensions until nearly fifty years after the battles ended. By the time Congress opened the door wide enough for soldiers to step through, many were elderly men with fading memories carrying old stories that had lived in their minds for decades. One was Thomas Thompson. At seventy-seven years old, he made his way into the Court of Common Pleas in Hamilton County, Ohio, in 1834 to record the service he’d given as a young man. 

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Delaware County Patriots: Lemuel Peterson

Read time: 6 min.

Some Revolutionary War stories blaze across the record with bold strokes. Think famous generals, dramatic battlefield moments, and names etched into monuments. Others, like that of Lemuel Peterson, glow quietly from the margins, waiting for someone to trace their outline. Peterson wasn’t a seasoned officer or a celebrated patriot. He was a boy from Cumberland County, New Jersey, barely thirteen years old when he stepped away from home and into the violent churn of the American Revolution.

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Mount Pleasant Township’s Mount Pleasant Church and Cemetery

Read time: 5 min.

I’ve been stopping by Mount Pleasant Cemetery in rural Yorktown for years, drawn in by its flowing well from which occasionally gushes some of the best water I’ve ever tasted. After a few visits, though, I realized something surprising: I knew almost nothing about the cemetery itself, not to mention the old church perched up on the hill above it!

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Delaware County Patriots: William Whicker

Read time: 7 min.

Tracking down the stories of Revolutionary War veterans can be a painstaking process, especially when the same man appears under several different spellings of his name. Take William Whicker, for example- sometimes recorded as “Witcher1,” “Whitcar2,” or even “Whitgar3.” These inconsistencies weren’t unusual in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, but they make the work of modern genealogists and historians difficult. Still, cross-referencing of service details, geographic clues, and family connections confirms that all those “Williams” are, in fact, the same soldier who once fought for independence.

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The creepiest mausoleum I’ve ever seen is in Glen Cove Cemetery

Read time: 6 min.

Some distant Quaker relatives of mine -a trio of brothers, in fact- were buried in Knightstown’s Glen Cove Cemetery. My mom and I were circling the grounds searching for their shared tombstone when something unexpected caught my eye. Rising in the distance was what has to be the strangest, eeriest mausoleum I’ve ever seen. In an instant, the family headstone hunt took a backseat to this haunting architectural oddity. Unfortunately, I don’t know a lot about it. 

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A burial ground in the middle of Muncie

Read time: 6 min.

When I think about cemeteries, two kinds usually come to mind: the sprawling, carefully landscaped municipal grounds and the tiny, forgotten graveyards tucked away in the countryside. It’s rare to find a pioneer burial ground hidden in the heart of suburbia, but that’s exactly where Collins Cemetery sits in Muncie.

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