Overview
A cemetery visit log helps readers document burial grounds respectfully. It should name what was seen, what was photographed, what remains uncertain, and which follow-up records are needed.
What this helps you learn
- A visit log can capture cemetery name, section, marker text, symbols, condition, photo date, access notes, and preservation concerns.
- It can point toward death certificates, obituaries, funeral homes, church records, military markers, pension files, plot books, and newspapers.
- It helps keep captions careful when images are added to public pages.
Careful claims
- Do not trespass, disturb graves, scrape stones, publish recent funeral details, or expose living-family grief.
- Do not treat a headstone as automatic proof of exact birth date, relationship, ancestry, tribe, legal status, DNA conclusions, descent, or membership.
- Do not make sensational claims from damaged markers, burial placement, symbols, or cemetery condition.
Research path
- Record location, date visited, marker text, photo filename, condition, nearby markers, source limitations, and follow-up records.
- Use respectful captions that say what the image shows and what it does not prove.
- Send sensitive family context through Safe Sharing before publication.
Source trail
- FOBA Safe Sharing – Privacy and living-person guardrails.
- FOBA Cemetery Records – Internal cemetery-record guide.
Evidence note: This starter entry is educational. Add sources, dates, maps, Community Notes, and Fact Checks as research develops.