To request a copy of this photo for your own personal use, please
contact our state coordinator. If you are not a family member or the original photographer —
please refrain from copying or distributing this photo to other websites.
Additional HARRIS Surnames in CRAIGHEAD County
HARRIS, Berthie AderHARRIS, William A "Red"HARRIS, Desota EHARRIS, J.A.HARRIS, CharlieHARRIS, ThomasHARRIS, Thomas NilsonHARRIS, Almer V.HARRIS, Otho A.HARRIS, RubyHARRIS, JaniceHARRIS, Jean F.HARRIS, Eva M.HARRIS, James L.HARRIS, Allen DHARRIS, Allen FosterHARRIS, Henry RestusHARRIS, Henry ChapmanHARRIS, Herman LeeHARRIS, Maudie EllenHARRIS, ZealandHARRIS, Monroe J.HARRIS, David WilliamHARRIS, David L.HARRIS, Frank C.HARRIS, Bessie J.HARRIS, James M.HARRIS, JohnHARRIS, SallyHARRIS, EthelHARRIS, John S.HARRIS, MaxHARRIS, Bettie AHARRIS, Merlin HHARRIS, EvaHARRIS, WilliamHARRIS, WillieHARRIS, JosephHARRIS, W JHARRIS, OmaHARRIS, L EHARRIS, ElmiraHARRIS, EddieHARRIS, AnnieHARRIS, Mattie LHARRIS, FloraHARRIS, Pearle LeeHARRIS, Edward CHARRIS, Alice AHARRIS, L SHARRIS, Legend DamialHARRIS, Family GravestoneHARRIS, Family StoneHARRIS, Henry LeviHARRIS, Verdellah
Thank you for visiting the Arkansas Gravestone Photo Project.
On this site you can upload gravestone photos, locate ancestors and
perform genealogy research. If you have a relative buried in Arkansas,
we encourage you to upload a digital image using our Submit a
Photo page. Contributing to this genealogy archive helps family historians and
genealogy researchers locate their relatives and complete their family tree.
Submitted: 6/16/08 • Approved: 6/16/08 • Last Updated: 9/15/12 • R28730-G0-S3
Moved from Memory Gardens Cemetery to Knights of Pythias Cemetery July 7, 1998 This African American cemetery, dedicated in the 1950's, was destroyed upon construction of the NEA Clinic on Parker Road. The salvageable remains were reburied in the Knights of Pythias Cemetery located on Strawfloor Road. A monument was erected above the mass grave of 16 coffins moved to this cemetery. The Black Cultural Heritage Center of Jonesboro houses a display of the items found after digging through the rubble. Articles of clothing, broken stones, hardware and pieces of the lining of caskets were recovered by the group.
Approx. 1890 - 1962 (I'm not sure what the stands for, could be the dates they had originally been interred?)
On the top : For we know that if our earthly house was dissolved, we have a building of God, an house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens
II Corinthinans 5 KJV
Contributed on 6/16/08 by tiredtech3
Email This Contributor
Suggest a Correction
Record #: 28730