RJM62
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2007
- Messages
- 13,157
- Location
- Upstate New York
- Display Name
Display name:
Geek on the Hill
It was the grave of my childhood best friend. He died of leukemia when we were 10.
The school had made all of us go to the funeral mass when John died, but none of us were allowed to go to the burial. Not that I think any of us would have wanted to at that age -- burials are not high on the list of fun things to do for most 10-year-olds -- but it always felt like unfinished business to me. He was my best friend. I owed him that much. But life often gets in the way of death, and it got relegated to my "to-do" list.
About 20 years ago, I decided it was time to find his grave and visit it. It turned out not to be as easy as I thought it would be.
The secretary of the church where the funeral was held claimed that they had no record of the burial.
The school we attended had closed down, as had the funeral home that handled John's funeral.
The city wouldn't talk to me unless I was an immediate relative.
None of the free online databases had any records of his burial place, nor did Ancestry.
Social Security had no records because children didn't typically get SSN's until they started working back then.
I couldn't find any newspaper obituaries.
None of my other childhood friends knew any more than I did.
I didn't know any of John's relatives other than his mother and father, who also had passed away.
Etcetera.
My search eventually led me back to the Cemeteries Division of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn and Queens. I was advised to ask for a particular person who was sort of an unofficial historian and archivist there. When I called, she told me that they didn't have any record of his burial, either. But she also asked me whether John's father was a veteran.
John's dad had indeed been a veteran. He'd served in World War II, as had most of the men in my neighborhood when I was a kid. He'd died about nine months before John did. I remember that the school made us go to that funeral, too; and I remember my clumsy (and largely unsuccessful) attempts to comfort my friend.
That's when I had a head-slapping moment and realized that John must be buried in a veterans' cemetery somewhere. So I called the VA. They asked me for his name, his father's name, his mother's name, and his year of death. I gave them the information, and they immediately told me that he was buried at the Long Island National Cemetery, in the same grave as his father and mother.
So yesterday I made the trip, many decades late, to visit the grave of the best friend I ever had. I thought it would be sad, and maybe even a bit traumatic. But as I was talking to him, I was flooded by happy memories of our childhood together, almost as if he was answering my words with memories.
I thought this visit would be a one-time thing -- just a loose end from childhood to tie up. But now I think I'll be going again.
Rich
The school had made all of us go to the funeral mass when John died, but none of us were allowed to go to the burial. Not that I think any of us would have wanted to at that age -- burials are not high on the list of fun things to do for most 10-year-olds -- but it always felt like unfinished business to me. He was my best friend. I owed him that much. But life often gets in the way of death, and it got relegated to my "to-do" list.
About 20 years ago, I decided it was time to find his grave and visit it. It turned out not to be as easy as I thought it would be.
The secretary of the church where the funeral was held claimed that they had no record of the burial.
The school we attended had closed down, as had the funeral home that handled John's funeral.
The city wouldn't talk to me unless I was an immediate relative.
None of the free online databases had any records of his burial place, nor did Ancestry.
Social Security had no records because children didn't typically get SSN's until they started working back then.
I couldn't find any newspaper obituaries.
None of my other childhood friends knew any more than I did.
I didn't know any of John's relatives other than his mother and father, who also had passed away.
Etcetera.
My search eventually led me back to the Cemeteries Division of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn and Queens. I was advised to ask for a particular person who was sort of an unofficial historian and archivist there. When I called, she told me that they didn't have any record of his burial, either. But she also asked me whether John's father was a veteran.
John's dad had indeed been a veteran. He'd served in World War II, as had most of the men in my neighborhood when I was a kid. He'd died about nine months before John did. I remember that the school made us go to that funeral, too; and I remember my clumsy (and largely unsuccessful) attempts to comfort my friend.
That's when I had a head-slapping moment and realized that John must be buried in a veterans' cemetery somewhere. So I called the VA. They asked me for his name, his father's name, his mother's name, and his year of death. I gave them the information, and they immediately told me that he was buried at the Long Island National Cemetery, in the same grave as his father and mother.
So yesterday I made the trip, many decades late, to visit the grave of the best friend I ever had. I thought it would be sad, and maybe even a bit traumatic. But as I was talking to him, I was flooded by happy memories of our childhood together, almost as if he was answering my words with memories.
I thought this visit would be a one-time thing -- just a loose end from childhood to tie up. But now I think I'll be going again.
Rich
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