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Cemetery:
Puderbaugh
Other:
Pleasant Hill
Sign:
Yes
Street:
City:
Ozawkie
Township:
Ozawkie
County:
Jefferson
State:
Kansas
Nation:
Zip:
lat_ns:
N
lat_h:
lat_mmss:
long_ew:
W
long_h:
long_mmss:
Status:
Abandoned
Size:
Small
Directions: 1 mile
west of Ozawkie off K92
Type:
Road-public
Location:
Rural
Terrain:
Level
Watersource: No
Features:
trees, shrubs, lots of thorn bushes
Property:
Public
Access:
Open
Enclosure:
Fence-Broken
Gate:
None
Established:
Gravestones: 50-100
Oldest:
October 1862
Newest:
July 1932
Removed:
Yes
Relocated:
Yes
Repairs:
Unsure
Methods:
Adhesives
Restoration: No
Association: Unsure
Records:
Unsure
Inventory:
Unsure
Availability:
Landscaping: No
Paths:
No
Trees:
Yes4
Crypts:
No
Fencing:
No
Brickwork: No
Ironwork: No
Sculpture: No
Fountains: No
Roads:
No
Buildings: No
Cement:
Yes
Granite:
Yes
Marble:
Yes
Native:
Yes
Slate:
Yes
Others:
Yes
Wood:
No
Materials:
Yes
Architectural: No
Angels:
Unsure
Draperies:
Unsure
Fraternal:
Unsure
Hands:
Unsure
Lambs:
Unsure
Monograms:
Unsure
Plants:
Unsure
Photos:
Unsure
Religious:
Unsure
Scrollwork: Unsure
Urns:
Unsure
Carvings:
Unsure
Condition:
Cemetery destroyed
Unmarked:
Yes
Broken:
Yes
Toppled:
Yes
Disintegrating: Yes
Buried:
Yes
Weather:
Yes
Pollution:
Unknown
Vandalized: Yes
Report:
No
VA1:
Gravestones-Overturned
VA2:
Gravestones-Broken
VA3:
VA4:
VA5:
Overgrowth:
Overgrowth1:
Overgrowth2:
Overgrowth3:
Overgrowth4: Gravestones-Damaging
GroundCover: Yes
Moss:
Yes
Vines:
Yes
Drainage:
Good
Problem1:
Problem2:
Owner:
Cemetery
Use:
Agricultural
Bordering:
Agricultural
Change:
Unknown
Reason:
Roads
Visited:
Rarely
Archeology: Unknown
Habitat:
Unknown
Contacted:
Surnames:
Brown, Cunning, Harnish, Heckman, Holler, Iman, Johnston,
Keener, Landers,
Marker, Metzger, Miller, Milikan, McC., Reams, Replogle,
Rhoades, Root,
Royer, Underwood, Wagner, Zern
Other_Information:
Some information about Puderbaugh Cemetery.
A man that owned the farm on
which Puderbaugh Cemetery is located,
decided one day that he was going to plow and plant his crops
in the
cemetery itself. So he pulled out all the markers
and lined them up
against the fence line. When townsfolk heard about
this they made him put
them all back. He put back some of them where they
once stood, the other
he put in small stacks here and there.
Most of the markers have now since been
buried and the cemetery is very
overgrown with thorn bushes and tiger lilies, so much so you
can hardly
even walk through the area.
It would be advised to go there
in the spring or fall months, so you
have some chance to spot a marker. It is to
overgrown in the summer and
snow would made it almost impossible to see any of the
markers, since most
of them are now laying down.
Support:
Submitted by:
The email address
found below contains an "_"
as the second character. To send
email to this person, you must remove the "_"
from the address.
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intercept them for junk mail purposes.
Name:
Jennifer
Email:
Zunker
Date:
25 JAN 2005
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