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    <persname>Miss Eugenia M. Henry</persname>, <placename>Madison, Conn.</placename>
    <persname>Miss Georgene W. Henry</persname>, <placename>Madison, Conn.</placename>
   <persname> Dr. Thomas H. A. Stites</persname> and wife, <placename>Hamburg Sanatarium, Pa.</placename>
   <persname> Mr. Robert W. Henry</persname>, <placename>Nazareth, Pa.</placename>
   <persname> Mr. Clarence A. Wolle</persname>, <placename>Bethlehem, Pa.</placename>


    Inscription on the Moravian Memorial, erected <date>1917-1918</date> by
the Moravian Church of <placename>Lancaster, Pa., </placename>in memory of members
previously interred in the original Prince Street Cemetery, <placename>Lan-
caster, Pa., </placename>sold in <date>1917</date>. Remains re-interred in group on this
spot:
Moravian
Here Lie the Remains
Disinterred from Prince
Street Cemetery
<date>April, 1917</date>
Names Recorded 
in
Moravian Church Archives


Memorial Shaft
To the Memory of
<persname>John Joseph Henry</persname>, of <placename>Lancaster, Pa.</placename>
Second Son of
<persname>William and Ann Wood Henry</persname>
<date>Nov. 4, 1758
April 15, 1811</date>

    (This stone originally erected at his grave in the Moravian Cemetery
on <placename>Prince Street, Lancaster, Pa., </placename>and at the cost of his direct descendant,
<persname>Miss Mary Buckley</persname>, of <placename>Chesnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa., </placename>restored and re-
moved, <date>1918</date>, to this new Moravian burial place.)

[page break]

The Old Moravian Cemetery
At Lancaster, Pa.
<emph>From The Lancaster New Era, 1917.</emph>
    "Tall sycamores and maples spread their aged boughs above the
graves of the ancient Moravian Cemetery on North Prince Street
near Chestnut. There, wrapped in their dreamless sleep, rest many
dignitaries of Old Lancaster. On the low monuments and pros-
trate slabs appear the names of such old-time worthies as the
Henrys, De Huffs, Graeffs, Weidels, Hobsons, Demuths, Carpen-
ters, Ebermans, and others. But soon this God's acre may be only
a memory.
    No more distinguished persons are buried there than the two
Henrys, father and son. Near the west end of the main walk of
the graveyard, running east and west, is the tomb of Col. William
Henry, of Revolutionary fame, who died in the year 1786. Close
to Prince Street, with the open Bible carved upon his monument,
is the grave of Judge John Joeseph Henry, [not finished]