In 1856, George & Elizabeth moved with their two small sons Will and Allen to central Iowa, where five more children were born: Jacob, May, Etta, Charles, and Minerva. Elizabeth died in 1870 at the age of 42, leaving George with seven children under age 17. George never remarried, living for 49 more years, when he was finally laid to rest beside his beloved Elizabeth.
In the same Crecelius plot lie his daughter Etta and her husband Aaron Coulter; a grandson Verne Alonzo Crecelius who lived for only two weeks in April 1892; a great-granddaughter Darleen Coulter Vajgrt and her husband Leonard; and a great-great-grandson Stanley Dickenson, who died in 1951, age 21 months.
Elizabeth's granite headstone---with her name misspelled Elizebeth---is not her original 1870 marker, which was locally-quarried soft limestone that weathered badly. Half a century later, her daughter Etta Coulter replaced the worn headstone with a durable grey granite one that matched that of Elizabeth's husband George, who died in 1919. Etta also paid for perpetual care for the Crecelius lot when she learned that had never been bought back when the burial ground was a private family cemetery for the Conrads & Creceliuses & their neighbors in the 1860s & '70s.
In 1856, George & Elizabeth moved with their two small sons Will and Allen to central Iowa, where five more children were born: Jacob, May, Etta, Charles, and Minerva. Elizabeth died in 1870 at the age of 42, leaving George with seven children under age 17. George never remarried, living for 49 more years, when he was finally laid to rest beside his beloved Elizabeth.
In the same Crecelius plot lie his daughter Etta and her husband Aaron Coulter; a grandson Verne Alonzo Crecelius who lived for only two weeks in April 1892; a great-granddaughter Darleen Coulter Vajgrt and her husband Leonard; and a great-great-grandson Stanley Dickenson, who died in 1951, age 21 months.
Elizabeth's granite headstone---with her name misspelled Elizebeth---is not her original 1870 marker, which was locally-quarried soft limestone that weathered badly. Half a century later, her daughter Etta Coulter replaced the worn headstone with a durable grey granite one that matched that of Elizabeth's husband George, who died in 1919. Etta also paid for perpetual care for the Crecelius lot when she learned that had never been bought back when the burial ground was a private family cemetery for the Conrads & Creceliuses & their neighbors in the 1860s & '70s.