Robin Ristow

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14 years 3 months 9 days
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Many of the memorials I created or manage are not related to me per the guidelines and I will be happy to transfer them to anyone who intends to improve the information in them. I manage them; I don't own them and I don't collect them, but I do have particular interest in certain memorials and would like to collaborate in making sure that they are documented properly.

If you'd like full resolution copies of any photos I've posted, poor as they are, please let me know. I'm also happy to help with providing sources for any information I've posted. (For memorials I've created based on information such as a death certificate I do notate the source.)

Regards,
Robin

"Grave-stones tell truth scarce forty years. Generations pass while some trees stand, and old families last not three oaks. To be read by bare inscriptions like many in Gruter, to hope for eternity by enigmatical epithets or first letters of our names, to be studied by antiquaries, who we were, and have new names given us like many of the mummies, are cold consolations unto the students of perpetuity, even by everlasting languages." - Urn Burial, Sir Thomas Browne, 1658.

Many of the memorials I created or manage are not related to me per the guidelines and I will be happy to transfer them to anyone who intends to improve the information in them. I manage them; I don't own them and I don't collect them, but I do have particular interest in certain memorials and would like to collaborate in making sure that they are documented properly.

If you'd like full resolution copies of any photos I've posted, poor as they are, please let me know. I'm also happy to help with providing sources for any information I've posted. (For memorials I've created based on information such as a death certificate I do notate the source.)

Regards,
Robin

"Grave-stones tell truth scarce forty years. Generations pass while some trees stand, and old families last not three oaks. To be read by bare inscriptions like many in Gruter, to hope for eternity by enigmatical epithets or first letters of our names, to be studied by antiquaries, who we were, and have new names given us like many of the mummies, are cold consolations unto the students of perpetuity, even by everlasting languages." - Urn Burial, Sir Thomas Browne, 1658.

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