
My mother’s family had lived in Marion and Harrison counties in West Virginia for generations. We placed flowers on the grave of my grandmother’s brother in a small family cemetery that’s now at the edge of a housing development. The land of the development once was a farm that my grandmother’s family worked. Her brother wanted to be buried in that cemetery because he and my grandmother enjoyed playing there when they were children.
Next, we stopped at the large cemetery in Shinnston. My grandparents, great-grandparents, and great-great grandparents on both sides of my mom’s family are buried there.
As my kids place flowers around the graves, I wondered if my distant grandparents ever thought their great-great-great grandchildren would come to pay respects almost a hundred years after their deaths. It’s a stunning thought.
I am so glad I got to take my kids to see our family history. I hope they can feel a connection to the relatives who came before them and the land where our family once lived.

