"William Swazey Aye had a big stone moved from east of Claridon to the Claridon Cemetery. When I say a big stone I mean a BIG STONE. It is a huge conglomerate stone made up of fragments of other stones but perfectly cemented together by nature. It is nearly 8 feet square on the bottom and almost 8 feet tall but not as square on top being a trifle pentagonal. I calculated that it must weight 15-20 tons. How they were able to get in on a sled and move it with horses across land and down and through the Whetstone river and back up to the Cemetery is beyond my imagination. I understand that the sled did break down in the river and they had quite a time getting it fixed but there is an article somewhere about the moving...They had this stone as a plot marker with the name 'Aye' chiseled into it. It is a stone carried down from Canada by the glacier and left in a field where the glacier melted back. This is from memory and may not be exact.
While I was at the Cemetery I copied down the following Aye tombstone data. W.S. Aye 1821-1908 soldier of 1861."
by Kensel Clutter.
"William Swazey Aye had a big stone moved from east of Claridon to the Claridon Cemetery. When I say a big stone I mean a BIG STONE. It is a huge conglomerate stone made up of fragments of other stones but perfectly cemented together by nature. It is nearly 8 feet square on the bottom and almost 8 feet tall but not as square on top being a trifle pentagonal. I calculated that it must weight 15-20 tons. How they were able to get in on a sled and move it with horses across land and down and through the Whetstone river and back up to the Cemetery is beyond my imagination. I understand that the sled did break down in the river and they had quite a time getting it fixed but there is an article somewhere about the moving...They had this stone as a plot marker with the name 'Aye' chiseled into it. It is a stone carried down from Canada by the glacier and left in a field where the glacier melted back. This is from memory and may not be exact.
While I was at the Cemetery I copied down the following Aye tombstone data. W.S. Aye 1821-1908 soldier of 1861."
by Kensel Clutter.
Inscription
A SOLDIER OF 1861
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