On Tuesday, September 15,
Rosie and Mr. Hawthorne left Danville
and hit the road for our home on the Outer Banks.
I have always wanted to go to Montrose,
in Hillsborough, North Carolina,
and tour the gardens there.
Montrose is the home of Nancy and Craufurd Goodwin.
(I wonder if Craufurd knows
his name is spelled really wrong),
Tours at Montrose are by appointment only
on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays.
And I'm on my way Tuesday.
TEASE!
More on the gardens forthcoming.
So sorry.
You'll have to wait for that post.
But first ...
We arrived a bit early for our appointment
at Montrose,
so we just drove down the road a bit
and found this beautiful old church and cemetery.

I found this lovely, wintry,
black and hauntingly gray photograph of St. Matthew's.
in 1829 a Justice of the Supreme Court
in which he presided for 19 years as its
Chief Justice.
"Labor ipse est voluptus."
Shoot.
I looked up the Latin,
"Labor ipse est voluptus."
which I could pretty much already figure out.
Labor means hardship, distress, fatigue, toil.
ipse means himself.
est means is.
voluptus means pleasurable, delightful,
pleasure-seeking, luxurious.
I need to go back and find out who this is.
I wish we could have stayed here longer
and talked to the caretaker
and learned more of the history,
but we needed to get to our appointment at Montrose
and I still wanted to see the inside of Saint Matthew's
before we had to leave.
I think Mr. Hawthorne and I definitely need
to take another trip to Hillsborough
and see if we can't take a guided tour
of this lovely old church and churchyard,
find out its history,
and learn the history of those young boys.
Mr. Hawthorne said he found
a marker for a 14 year old boy
who served in the Civil War.
(Of course, he waited to tell me this information
after we got home and I started writing this post
NOT when I was in the graveyard with my camera.)
But WAIT, Dear Readers!
I had found the grave site on my own.
I just didn't know it until I was enlarging my photos.
Here's the head stone for a 14-year old CHILD
who fought in the Civil War:
Inscription:
A USEFUL CITIZEN
A TRUE CONFEDERATE SOLDIER AT FOURTEEN
DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE
AFFECTIONATE, GENEROUS AND BRAVE BY NATURE
BELOVED BY HIS NEIGHBORS AND FRIENDS
WITH HEROIC FORTITUDE
HE ENDURED THE SUFFERING WHICH FELL TO HIS LOT
AND WITH A FIERY FAITH IN CHRIST
PASSED INTO REST
BLESSED ARE THE PURE IN HEART
FOR THEY SHALL SEE GOD
I also want to know who did the stained glass,
learn the history and story behind the panels,
and know who the figures are.
Very nice. Since I am both an art historian and an Episcopalian, I'll see if I can enlarge the pictures later and tell you who everyone is...
ReplyDeleteThat would be wonderful, Ken. Thank you.
ReplyDelete