
July 20, 2021
I’m up to my eyeballs here in tombstones—physical, literal, metaphorical, allegorical, you name it. Last night I watched “Five Guns to Tombstone” on this cowboy movie channel I’m a little hooked on. It was a C minus in acting but a solid B in plot. After that I couldn’t stick with, “The Toughest Gun in Tombstone”. It was taking its time to get up to speed. I turned it off after 15 minutes and went to bed.
Still, I wake up with tombstones. I have my mom’s here in the garage at my Aunt Linda’s. More accurately, it is a memorial stone.

It’s my job to find something to do with it since it’s been displaced from the river house my Uncle John sold. I’ve put it upon myself to see if my mom’s partner of 14 years has a marker that I might be able to place it beside. I’ve left a message at the girl’s camp where Marrietta had connections stretching over 60 years, but my guess is there isn’t one. Granite markers are expensive and it’s usually only family that bothers with them. I’m not sure she had any family she was close too.
When I was in Winchester I washed my Grandma and Grandpa’s grave. After scrubbing away the first day I came back later and used a product called Wet and Forget which, supposedly, over time, eats away any moss and lichen and keeps the marker clean for a year or two. It takes it a while to do it’s job which is why my grandparents markers don’t look so clean.


“I thought you would like moss and lichen,” Jillian said over the phone.
“I do, but I guess the point of a marker is for people to be able to read it,” I answered.
I was still of the mind set my cousin Chuck left me with at the Cracker Barrel when he told me that markers were useful for genealogist.
Jillian was right about my aesthetic though. I much prefer the natural look. Here are a few favorite markers I found walking through the University cemetery at Sewanee.




Then there are the three 4 x 7 foot slab markers out on the old Robertson land. They remain on my mind too. My Robertson grandfather, who I never met, bought a 25 acre tract of the land in Blaine, TN back in 1936. He paid $75 for it. He bought another 35 acre tract across the road in 1947 and paid $650. (I went to the county office to look up the deeds.)
When Judson Robertson died he was buried there because of all the good memories the family had on that land. A UT chemistry professor my dad’s family spent summers there, 25 miles from their home in Knoxville. Dad’s dad died at his last University graduation wearing his professorial cap and gown.He was retiring the next day. I have a picture of him somewhere mid-heart attack.
My genealogy-loving grandma Robbie put an enormous slab marker for him in the woods there and one for herself and son Clifton. Today I went back with the Wet and Forget. What still needs to be done is to decide whether or not to have her 1996 death date added to her marker.

A preliminary inquiry of engraving looks like it will be around $2000 to get someone to trek through those woods and sandblast or chisel it into the granite. There isn’t nearby access to electricity, so they’ll have to haul a generator out there if sand blasting is the method to be used. My step-mom Sharon has offered to pay for this.
She also texted last night and asked if I think my dad should have a marker out there with them since he would be the only one of that nuclear family who didn’t.
“No, I don’t think so. Where would it end?” I texted back.
It’s a valid question I think and I guess the answer is when the last Robertson, Knott, Long, Rothwell, etc., drops dead—basically when climate change kills off the last human on this planet.
I suppose my interest in genealogy waxes and wanes. At the moment, adding more tombstones to the family legacy seems of dubious value. The whole point of this trip—to discover what I can about myself and what makes me who I am—seems to have little imperative since this rubber tramp has parked his wheels.
My cousin Bob lived the last of his days in Long Island New York before dying of Covid last February. He might have been able to guide me. Like my cousin Chuck, he was the one most interested in genealogy. In fact, on the Robertson side he was the only one I knew who gave two shucks about family history. I suppose I do, but he really did. He was even into finding family on those DNA websites. He’d actually go visit people he’d never met. He also visited all the slab markers my grandma Robbie spent the last of the Robertson fortune placing all over the Southeast.

(Granma Robbie’s verbosity, not being confined to the spoken word but also to those carved in granite, spent a small fortune on my Uncle Clifton’s marker. At today’s prices, the engraving alone would have cost around $30,000 at the going rate of $20/letter…and she did several of these rather wordy markers in other places.)
More importantly to me, Bob was the last living relative who really knew and loved my dad. He looked up to him like an older brother and could tell me stories about him—real stories not just genealogical relationship stories. We exchanged long emails together for more than twelve years after my father died in 2009.
When Bob died last February we were in the middle of a long email discussion that could have been subtitled, “Is our family crazy or do all families have this?” I was leaning toward the first while acknowledging that all families are touched by mental illness. Still we seemed to have more than our share—Bob’s branch in particular. His mother killed herself. His first wife killed herself and one of his two brothers killed himself. Then there is the rampant alcoholism. It was almost easier to name who wasn’t than who was. It seems to be part of our genetic code. It’s one of the reasons I never wanted to have kids.
When Bob died I was on a camping trip. He had included me in a group chat on Facebook but I wasn’t looking at Facebook much anymore. The chat explained that everyone in his household was sick with Covid. The next day he said he needed oxogen and couldn’t get any delivered and that he had terrible diarrhea. The next day, the one on which he died, there were no comments, only questions. I didn’t see any of this until it was too late.
What I got instead was a voice message from the only other person I’m in contact with on the Robertson side of the family. She said, “We closed on the house. By the way did you hear cousin Bob died?”
I was devastated. I didn’t know I contained such a well of tears. In fairness to my other cousin, she wasn’t aware that I had become so close to Bob. And WTF cousin Bob? Have you ever heard of calling an ambulance? I still don’t have the full story.
Anyway, tombstones…
I’ve actually thought of putting my mom’s marker in the Robertson family graveyard on the land in Blaine—so let’s see what that would look like: markers for my grandparents Judson and Clara (hers w/o a death date); a marker for my Uncle Clifton, their first son together; no marker for their second son—my dad; finally a small marker for their in-law, my mom, divorced from dad almost 20 years at the time of his death—maybe not such a good idea. Her tiny marker would also, physically, look like a foot note to the three giant slab. I do kind of like the absurdity of the whole idea though.
We scattered dad’s remaining ashes around the markers when Sharon and James were here and I think that is good enough for him. He’s already had his main wish fulfilled by Sharon. Theatre ham that he was, he wanted his ashes in an urn placed on the mantel piece for everyone to see and talk about along with a short poem he wrote. Sharon did him one better and put some of his ashes in three urns keeping one for herself, sending one to my sister and one to me. We don’t have a mantel at my house but we put him on a shelf.

(Although dad’s isn’t a curse, he was inspired by the one Shakespeare wrote for his tomb. We had a framed rubbing of it in my childhood home(s). Shakespeare’s went “Good friend for Jesus sake forbear to dig the dust enclosed here, Bless be he who spares these stones and curse be he who moves my bones.”)
By the way, getting back to the topic of absurdism—it was one of my father’s favorite types of theatre. He loved Samuel Beckett and one of the first plays he directed at his first college teaching job at Sewanee was Rhinoceros by the absurdist Eugéne Ionesco.
My mom’s folks, dad’s in-laws, wanted to support pop’s efforts at his first big gig and a number of mom’s family regularly made the trip up the mountain from Jasper to see the plays he directed. My short, little Aunt Berniece was one of them. Aunt Linda, a young woman fresh out of college accompanied her to the Ionesco play. Aunt Linda reported to me the other day that coming out of the Rhinoceros production way back in 1966 Berniece said “That’s the most ridiculous thing I’ve seen in my life”.
Death, and how we memorialize it certainly seems to have a good dose of ridiculous mixed in with the serious. It just sometimes takes a while to get through the mourning to see it.
What I’ve suggested to Sharon is that instead of purchasing any more heavy slabs of granite that we instead start a family non-fungible token or NFT. This is as good as granite and quite possibly will outlast that hardest of rocks by millions of years (if there are any humans left by then). Also, because its digital, all kinds of information could be added to honor, explain, or celebrate the life of the deceased.
Here are a few people I could add to the blockchain:
Clara Hamlett Robertson
Died: June 19, 1996, Johnson City, TN
Robert Manning, Jr.
Died: February 28, 2021, Cedarhurst, NY
and of special note,
Virginia Powers
Died: July 21, 2021, Chattanooga, TN
Virginia, the grandmother of my cousins Kim and Trae passed away yesterday at 94 years old. She was a lovely lady. Virginia was one of ten Tennessee relatives that came to visit me at Christmas time in Berkeley, CA in 2007. We all bombed around northern California seeing the sights in a rented van with Celeste the Parking Goddess treating us very well. Virginia and my oldest living cousin Patsy, who is now 89, bunked together in a motel on University Avenue, near where I lived. By all signs Virginia and Patsy were the perfect roommates and could be seen giggling like teenagers everywhere we went, from Alcatraz and Fisherman’s Wharf to Napa and Muir Woods. One of our favorite non-touristy things was visiting tree sitters in a grove of old oaks on the UC Berkeley campus. Virginia will be sorely missed.



























































