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Mathew Thornsberry

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Mathew Thornsberry

Birth
USA
Death
5 Oct 1867 (aged 59–60)
USA
Burial
Rogers, Benton County, Arkansas, USA Add to Map
Plot
southwest corner of cemetery
Memorial ID
View Source
Mathew Thornsberry is the husband of Elizabeth Thornsberry.
He is the father of America, buried beside him and of Sarah Ann (Thornsberry) Kendrick.
Sarah Ann married Francis Marion Kendrick, Francis served in the Confederate Cavalry from Arkansas. Their son Oscar Frederick Kendrick served in World War I.

Across the top of the double stone that Mathew shares with his wife is engraved, 'Gone But Not Forgotten'
Between Mathew and Elizabeth's panels on the stone is carved an urn with a water lily growing upward ending in with a blossom that looks like a Calla Lily.

The last name on each side of this stone is mis-spelled. The correct spelling is 'Thornsberry', on this stone one 'r' has been left out.

This stone and that of Mathew and Elizabeth's daughter, America, is inside a wrought iron fence that is still in remarkable shape. The knob on the gate is very ornate and quite beautiful, see the picture to the right.

Mathew Thornsberry is the husband of Elizabeth Thornsberry.
He is the father of America, buried beside him and of Sarah Ann (Thornsberry) Kendrick.
Sarah Ann married Francis Marion Kendrick, Francis served in the Confederate Cavalry from Arkansas. Their son Oscar Frederick Kendrick served in World War I.

Across the top of the double stone that Mathew shares with his wife is engraved, 'Gone But Not Forgotten'
Between Mathew and Elizabeth's panels on the stone is carved an urn with a water lily growing upward ending in with a blossom that looks like a Calla Lily.

The last name on each side of this stone is mis-spelled. The correct spelling is 'Thornsberry', on this stone one 'r' has been left out.

This stone and that of Mathew and Elizabeth's daughter, America, is inside a wrought iron fence that is still in remarkable shape. The knob on the gate is very ornate and quite beautiful, see the picture to the right.



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