For those who make use of online resources like Find A Grave
or BillionGraves, I suppose it’s one thing to grouse about not finding one’s
own relative in the listings—and another thing to actually do something about
it.
When it came to reconstructing my tracks and figuring out
just where Leon S. Bean was buried, I had
hoped—in lieu of looking it up in my missing research file from so many years
ago—that I could just pull up the record on one of the cemetery sites online.
Wrong.
It turns out that, despite boasting thousands upon thousands
of listings—or, I suppose, in BillionGraves’ case, millions at the very least—online
sites do not actually have everyone’s listings. In many cases, it is only
through the kindness of heart of a veritable army of volunteers that those
records are virtually accessible.
Unfortunately, Leon Bean had not yet found his genealogical
angel.
With an upcoming trip to San Jose in the works, I was starting to get
desperate. I had no idea where the
man was buried—except, of course, for that vague memory that it was “somewhere
in San Jose.”
San Jose has come a long way
since Leon last saw it,
certainly—not to mention, it was a lot bigger than when I last visited Leon’s grave in
the 1970s. All I could remember of the cemetery was that it was relatively
large, and had some nice flower beds.
Of course, that meant I didn’t
remember the cemetery’s name.
It turned out that the Find A Grave listings came in handy,
after all. I did a search for cemeteries in Santa Clara County,
leaving the field for name of the cemetery blank, naturally, because that was
the part I didn’t know. And, voilà, there it was: the cemetery name I
was seeking.
Of course, I had to wade through dozens of names of
cemeteries around the county to find it. Thankfully, there weren’t that many
for San Jose,
proper. And the Find A Grave listings show how many interments there are,
total, per cemetery, which helped eliminate historic or abandoned properties
from my search.
So there it was: my target cemetery. After a phone call to
inquire whether my hunch was on target, I had my final answer. The cemetery? Oak Hill Memorial Park, once known as Pioneer Cemetery.
Once I had the destination mapped out—the cemetery is on Curtner Avenue, to
the south of downtown San Jose—the
next step was to carve out some time to drive there and snap a replacement
photo of the headstone. This became one of the first stops on our research trip
to San Jose a
week ago.
After grousing about the lack of entries on those convenient
sites—Find A Grave and BillionGraves—I suppose it would be only right to do my
part as a volunteer and add this little bit to the composite genealogical picture. And we
actually did make that first attempt, right there on the cemetery grounds.
Since my husband has the BillionGraves app loaded into his smart phone, standing
in front of Leon’s
headstone, he tried to do just that.
Would you believe, right in the heart of Silicon Valley, the error message we got back in the midst of our attempt
was inability to ascertain GPS readings?! If there was anywhere I’d think the BillionGraves functions would fly, it would
certainly be in the midst of the valley called home by such technology giants
as Apple, Adobe, Intel, Cisco, and many others. So much for our good
intentions.
I can't believe the GPS wouldn't work there. Wow! It worked for me in all the little tiny towns in Indiana.
ReplyDeleteGood use of FAG.
Betty, I couldn't believe it, either. We got a chuckle out of the irony of it all...but I did also get annoyed with how ridiculous it all was!
DeleteAmazing - technology fails when you'd least expect it.
ReplyDeleteImagine how things would have been different if this Leon Bean was Leon Leonwood Bean? :)
Yes, that name is tantalizingly close. I'm still open to the possibility that they might have been cousins.
DeleteWhodathunk? In moments like that when GPS wouldn't work in the most connected area of the world, you just want to look around for Alan Funt.
ReplyDeleteNow there's a name I haven't run across in a long time! Well, if it was Mr. Funt himself, I'd like to know how he turned off the GPS system in a place like that!
DeleteWell at least you got the photo! :)
ReplyDeleteYes! On my (almost) old fashioned (digital) camera. At least I still have some level of control over whether that tool works!
Delete