Man Digging in Back Yard Finds Tombstones Linked to Military

By Jeff Black, MSNBC

Credit: MICHAEL ERSKINE, The Commercial Appeal

These tombstones are among 13 discovered buried in Jason Blackburn's back yard.

May 23, 2012 Updated May 23, 2012 at 8:12 AM PDT

A Tennessee man digging in his backyard garden over the weekend found 13 tombstones that have been traced to a historic military cemetery.

Jason Blackburn, a nurse at the Baptist Memorial Hospital for Women in Memphis, was clearing a walkway that leads to his dog’s pen when he dug up a tombstone below some 3 inches of dirt. At first he mistook it for a garden stone, the Memphis Commercial Appeal reported.

“My first reaction was, ‘Oh my goodness, I hope there’s not dead bodies in my backyard,” Blackburn told the newspaper. “I mean that’s the first reaction when you’re digging in your backyard and you find tombstones.”

Blackburn searched a name on one of the gravestones -- Pvt. Arthur Woodson -- on the Internet and determined it was linked to Memphis National Cemetery, a historic memorial park that goes back to the Civil War and is now run by the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Ramon Miller, director for Memphis National Cemetery and the national cemeteries in Little Rock and Corinth, Miss., told msnbc.com that VA workers were heading over to Blackburn’s home on Tuesday to inspect the tombstones. He said the time the markers went missing has been narrowed down to a four-month period in 1970. It is believed the markers are from the 1960s.

“This is government property,” Miller told msnbc.com. “We’re going to retrieve them and look to see what information they have.”

He said the stones include markers for veterans, spouses and even a young child. The found gravestones are “old headstones” that have been replaced by newer markers after the death of a spouse or child, he said.

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