![]() ![]() Arwine Ruddick (1862-1891) - buried in Columbus City Cemetery, Columbus, Bartholomew County, Indiana They are both buried in Columbus City Cemetery, Columbus, Bartholomew County, Indiana. John Shyrock Arwine (1824-1905) and Harriet Amanda Manville Arwine (1836-1899). Next we stop at the sister of the above, Mary Eva Arwine. John Shyrock Arwine (1874-1924) - buried in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia (Commander of the Battleship Kansas and died from an illness contracted at sea) Arwine (1875-1878) - buried in Columbus City Cemetery, Columbus, Bartholomew County, Indiana Sylvanus Manville Arwine (1866-1895) - buried in Columbus City Cemetery, Columbus, Bartholomew County, IndianaĬharles H. Arwine Ruddick (1862-1891) - buried in Columbus City Cemetery, Columbus, Bartholomew County, Indiana Mary Eva Arwine (1855-1865) - buried in Southview Cemetery, Nashville, Brown County, Indiana John Shyrock Arwine (1824-1905) and Harriet Amanda Manville Arwine (1836-1899). I have found a John Anderson in the marriage records for the county, but there is no mention of a middle name, so I am not sure that this is him. The Brown County Cemetery Committee/Historical Society have done an amazing job uncovering this lovely little cemetery and i am thrilled that they took time out of their busy schedules to take me and my daughter up to see it. According to Find-A Grave, there are 113 interments, but there may well be more with as many headstones that have been unearthed recently. It was originally three separate cemeteries, Southview, Oak Hill and Calvin, but with time they seemed to have merged into one. Southview Cemetery is located just off of downtown Nashville in the woods and up a hill. I am lucky to be able to share with everyone my photos and information for this hidden gem in Nashville, Indiana. We met with Rhonda and Val who then drove us a few blocks up the road to the well-hidden entrance to Southview Cemetery. This past Monday, the first day of my vacation, my daughter and I hopped in the car and headed to Nashville. ![]() Then, to my surprise, they were nice enough to offer to lead me and my daughter out to see it and photograph it. Not only was the cemetery not gone, but it was coming back to life! I thanked them for all of their hard work in locating and digging up stones, removing dead and fallen trees and brush. They had been to Southview and were cleaning it up! They found lost stones! Seeing this information was thrilling. Then one day a post appeared on Facebook from the Brown County Cemetery Committee. I began to think that it was lost and gone forever. I followed the directions given, used my GPS locator to follow coordinates and still nothing. I had been searching for Southview Cemetery in Nashville, Indiana since 2015 and had not been able to locate it. But, I did get the chance to travel to a small cemetery that I hadn't been able to locate thanks to a kind invitation from two lovely ladies at the Brown County Historical Society. Hello fellow cemetery enthusiasts! Sorry that it has been so long, but there just hasn't been time for me to get out to any new cemeteries this year. ![]()
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