Camden, Mo "According to "Gone But Not Forgotten" there is a picture of the Mace Graveyard and the sign in front of this book. This is what it says: Mace Graveyard Est 1820. The Mace family originally buried their family members and colored slaves in this plot of ground. The family members were identified with "Markers." However, the colored slaves only received a sandstone rock as a marker. In 1930, the white people were moved to Zion Cemetery Anderson Hollow, Linn Creek, MO. The colored people, 3 to 6 unidentified, remain buried in this grove (sic). There are six "Sandstones" not of origin to this area-thus the estimate of 3-6 graves. This fence and marker erected in the spring of 1994."
Camden, Mo "According to "Gone But Not Forgotten" there is a picture of the Mace Graveyard and the sign in front of this book. This is what it says: Mace Graveyard Est 1820. The Mace family originally buried their family members and colored slaves in this plot of ground. The family members were identified with "Markers." However, the colored slaves only received a sandstone rock as a marker. In 1930, the white people were moved to Zion Cemetery Anderson Hollow, Linn Creek, MO. The colored people, 3 to 6 unidentified, remain buried in this grove (sic). There are six "Sandstones" not of origin to this area-thus the estimate of 3-6 graves. This fence and marker erected in the spring of 1994."
Family Members
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Records on Ancestry
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