Update: Jane Osborn has identified this as a Gulf Fritillary, Agraulis vanillae.
Pictures by John S. Quarterman, Lowndes County, Georgia, 21 June 2010.
Update: Jane Osborn has identified this as a Gulf Fritillary, Agraulis vanillae.
Pictures by John S. Quarterman, Lowndes County, Georgia, 21 June 2010.
Joyce called in a field agent to go find it: her son John N. Feazell, Jr., who lives near Savannah. Joyce reported back on 5 June 2010:
It is in the Cemetery you referred to. John went and found the marker and took this picture so it is for real.
Picture of the marker in Gravel Hill Cemetery, Bloomingdale, Georgia, by John N. Feazell, Jr., 5 June 2010.
As I remarked to Joyce:
You can see how PFC Horner’s daddy might have been upset, having already lost every other immediate relative.She agreed.Too bad the North Koreans used it in their propaganda.
Roll credits.
-jsq
Remember the front of the pamphlet gave a location for the tombstone. A bit of work with google maps showed the highway between Bloomingdale and Pooler would be US 80. So far, so good. Let’s try to narrow it down.
The deceased’s last name was Horning, and there is something called Horning Memorial Cemetery near Bloomingdale. But that’s not on US 80; it’s on US 17 between Bloomingdale and I-16.
That might be the right location, but even though google maps has pretty good resolution there for both satellite and streetview images, the stone doesn’t appear to be there.
Ah, but the book
Continue readingHere’s the back of the pamphlet:
Note John’s hand-written note:
Found near the fort of GI Baldy, 26 March. Is it true?So I told Joyce I didn’t know, but I’d take the case.
The back of the pamphlet has a transcription of the tombstone pictured: Continue reading
That’s right, the nine foot tall longleaf I’m holding is only three years old. They told us they would never grow without spraying. But we weeded these trees with hoes and gloves, and here they are.
Picture of John S. Quarterman with trees by Gretchen Quarterman, Lowndes County, Georgia, 2 July 2010.
John, have you by chance ever seen this in your travels around the Savannah area? I found this in some of the stuff John had in his Korea scrapbook.Here it is, yellowed and tattered:
John Feazell, who was principal at all three of Pine Grove Elementary, Hahira Middle School, and Lowndes High School when I was there (I sometimes thought he was protectively following me around), had a scrapbook of pictures and other material from his service in Korea as a Sergeant in the Army. He had showed me this item some years ago. It’s a propaganda flyer, one of many dropped by the North Koreans on Allied troops.
It reads:
A FATHER’S MEMORIAL TO SON KILLED IN KOREAA Savannnah, Ga., father has ordered this big boulder-type memorial to his 19-year-old son who was killed in action in the fighting in Korea. It will be placed on the edge of the highway between Blomingdale and Pooler, Ga., U.S.A. THE POLITICIANS ELECTED IN 1952 ARE JUST AS READY TO SEE YOU KILLED AS THOSE ELECTED IN 1948. THIS WAR IS SENSELESS! GET TOGETHER TO STOP IT!
OK, it should be possible to find a large block of stone like that. The game’s afoot, as Sherlock Holmes would say!
-jsq