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Not for the fainthearted: 10 very unusual and bizarre graves (PHOTOS)

Graves of a Catholic woman and her Protestant husband, who were not  allowed to be buried together. In the Protestant part of this cemetery, J.W.C  van Gorcum, colonel of the Dutch Cavalry and militia commissioner in Limburg, is  buried. His wife, lady J.C.P.H van Aefferden, is buried in the Catholic part.  They were married in 1842, the lady was 22 and the colonel was 33, but he was a  protestant and didn’t belong to the nobility.

This caused quite a  commotion in Roermond. After being married for 38 years, the colonel died in  1880 and was buried in the protestant part of the cemetery against the wall. His  wife died in 1888 and had decided not to be buried in the family tomb but on the  other side of the wall, which was the closest she could get to her husband. Two  clasped hands connect the graves across the wall. (Link)

The Recoleta Cemetery is most famous for being the burial ground of Eva  Duarte de Peron “Evita,” but it actually holds many famous military leaders,  presidents, scientists, poets and other important or wealthy  Argentineans.

David Alleno was an Italian immigrant who dreamed of being  buried in the prestigious cemetery where he worked as a caretaker from 1881 to  1910. He saved enough money to buy a  space and built his own tomb. He even traveled back to his home country to find  an artist who could carve his own figure in marble, complete with keys, broom &  watering can. Legend says that  after the tomb was finished David took his own life inside his grave, but many  reputable sources say he died years after the tomb was constructed.  (Link)

This headstone is also located at the Recoleta Cemetery in Argentina.  What’s unusual about it? Well, a man sitting on his sofa looking seriously at  the horizon while a woman is seated in another one, at his back, but they are  looking in opposite directions. They are  placed like that because he died first, so the family made his Mausoleum. Some  years later, when his wife died, in her testament she asked to be placed that  way so as to represent their marriage:  they spent their last 30 years without speaking a word.  (Link)

Fernand Arbelot was a musician and actor who died in 1990 and was buried  in the Pere Lachaise cemetery. He wished to gaze at the face of his wife for  eternity. (Link)

This unique monument shows a young boy jumping upward, out of his  wheelchair. Confined to the chair most of his young life, he is now free of  earthly burdens. (Link)

Gravestones stacked around a tree which has grown up since part of the  St. Pancras burial ground was cleared in the 1860′s to make way for the London & Midland railway line. The young  architect supervising the work was Thomas Hardy, the well-known author.  (Link)

Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris is possibly the most visited graveyard  in the world, and it’s known as much for the beauty of its monuments as for the  celebrity of its occupants.  However,  arguably the most dramatic tomb belongs to an author most people have never  heard of.

Georges Rodenbach was a 19th century Belgian writer, best known for a book pretty much relegated to  serious literary students. Bruges-la-Morte, a symbolic novel published in 1892,  was about a man mourning his dead wife. So, it’s painfully poignant that  Rodenbach’s tomb depicts a patina bronze likeness of himself actually emerging  from the grave, with a rose in one hand.  (Link)

When Jonathan Reed’s wife, Mary, died in 1893, the widower didn’t want  to leave her side. In fact, he was so devoted that he moved into her tomb, where  he lived (with a parrot) for over 10 years. Reed died in 1905 and was finally  interred with Mary. (Link)

The most famous attraction in Hiawatha, Kansas is a 1930′s tomb sitting  in Mount Hope Cemetery near the southeast edge of town.  John Milburn Davis came  to Hiawatha in 1879 at the age of 24. After a short time, he married Sarah Hart,  the daughter of his employer. Her family did not approve. The Davises started  their own farm, prospered and were married for 50 years. When Sarah died in  1930, the Davises were wealthy. Over the  next 7 years, John Davis spent most of that wealth on Sarah’s  grave.

The amount spent on the Davis Memorial has been estimated at  anywhere between $100,000 and several times that amount. In any case, it was a  large amount and included the signing over of the farm and mansion. This was  during the Depression, when money was tight.

Several reasons are offered  for the extravagance including great love or guilt, anger at Sarah’s family, and  a desire that the Davis fortune be exhausted before John’s death.

The  Davis Memorial grew by stages, which is bit of a shame. If it had been planned,  it might have been built on a larger lot and made more attractive. The memorial  began with a typical gravestone, but John worked with Horace England, a Hiawatha  monument dealer, making the gravesite  more and more elaborate. There are 11 life-size statues of John and Sarah Davis  made of Italian marble, many stone urns and a marble canopy that is reported as  weighing over 50 tons.  (Link)

Jack Crowell owned the last wooden clothespin manufacturing factory in  the United States. He originally wanted a real spring in the clothespin so that  children could play on it. He is buried  in Middlesex, VT.(Link)

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