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<br />EXHIBIT 1: Information about Cemetery's History <br /> <br />Pleasanton Memorial Gardens Cemetery, Introduction <br /> <br />(Formerly "Odd Fellows Cemetery") <br /> <br />Location: <br /> <br />5780 Sunol Blvd. <br />Pleasanton, California 94566 <br /> <br />The above address may be used for inquiries. The location is adjacent to St. Augustine's Catholic <br />Cemetery. <br /> <br />This cemetery is owned and operated by the International Order of Odd Fellows Lodge No. 255, <br />Pleasanton, California. "The Lodge #255 of the Odd-Fellows was organized on January 17, 1877 with <br />six members." (Historical Atlas of Alameda County - 1878) <br /> <br />The Amador-Livermore Valley Historical Society (AL VHS) has in its archives a ledger (1886 May 3) <br />recording 23 very early burials in the Odd Fellows cemetery, starting in 1886. (AL VHS Carton 2). The <br />entries in this ledger are surprisingly rich in data, giving name of decedent, date and place of birth and <br />death, parents' names, and cause of death. We found still-existing stones for only 6 of the 23 burials. The <br />entire contents of the old burials ledger are reproduced at the end of this chapter. <br /> <br />The first recorded burial is of a Sunol Glen resident named Peek, first name not given. The burial was in <br />Lot #91 on May 2, 1886. The following day, J. M. Peek, Esq. bought that lot for $6.00. In the notation <br />system used in this book, Lot #91 is in Section B, Row 20. There is no surviving grave marker for Mr. <br />or Ms. Peek. <br /> <br />The OAR recorded the inscriptions in this cemetery in 1935. (6 pages, preserved by AL VHS, Box 13). It <br />is somewhat surprising, in view of the vandalism so common in cemeteries, that only one stone has <br />disappeared since 1935. In four other cases, new stones with less detailed inscriptions have been erected <br />since 1935. The OAR information has been integrated into our listing, with an annotation in the <br />comments column. We found many errors in the OAR booklet and have reconfirmed that our readings <br />are correct. <br /> <br />The present managers of Pleasant on Memorial Gardens, Robert Barnes Sr. and Robert Barnes Jr., have <br />kindly furnished us with their record of burials in the cemetery. One of the documents is the original <br />deed book for lots sold between 1886 and 1966. In a table at the end of this chapter we present the data <br />that we extracted from the I'leasanlQn Gardens deedJ:!Qok. Although it may seem at first that this <br />information needlessly duplicates that from the gravestones, we chose to present it for two reasons. <br /> <br />First, the deed book contains the name of the purchaser of the lot. He mayor may not be buried on the <br />lot, but he is probably related to those who are, and this is genealogical information. The kinship <br />groupings shown on the deeds are sometimes clearer than those inferred from the gravestones. <br /> <br />Second, information in the deed record is sometimes more detailed than that on the tombstone. Cause of <br />death is sometimes given. For example, we read in deed #82, "Wm. H. Winslow aged 48 yrs. killed by <br />being beaten on head with an axe 7 or 8th of May 1909...". A genealogist studying the Winslow family <br />will immediately be led to a search of inquest records, criminal court records, and newspaper accounts <br />with a good chance of finding family information. <br /> <br />http://www.l-ags.org/cemyd/pgintro.htrnl <br /> <br />5/31/2006 <br />