TRAVELLER'S GRAVE
"Traveller" was Lee's renowned horse, purchased by Lee in 1862 and became his faithful companion throughout the Civil War. Traveller became a well-known figure on the campus of Washington College where Lee served as President until his death. Traveller lived in the stables next to the President's house (which now serves as the garage to the Lee House).
Traveller died in 1871 from lockjaw after stepping on a rusty nail. He was originally buried on campus, but his bones were exhumed to be preserved. They were on display for a number of years on campus before being reinterred at this spot in 1971. The Virginia Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy donated the plaque in his memory.
A student tradition evolved of leaving gifts at the grave to provide for Traveller. Students believed that if you left Traveller a gift, you would do well on your next exam. Originally, carrots and apples were the gifts of choice, but eventually, the tradition evolved into leaving coins.
The tradition is that if you leave a penny, it should be left tails side up because Abraham Lincon is on the other side (not really meant to be as disrespectful as it sounds). A quarter (Virginian George Washington and namesake of the school) or nickel (Virginian Thomas Jefferson) is to be left face up.
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He used his own money to buy warm cloth for George Washington Army.
he gave money to everybody who fought in the war with him
in the 1960's Horne marched in Washington to raise money for the NAACP and the National council of Negro woman.
Well, Akhenaton was a great pharaoh and contributed to society, so I very highly doubt they would just not care. There were many grave robbers in ancient Egypt, so there is a high chance that it just got robbed and sold for money.
i think that she took money in her grave with her.
I Spit on Your Grave grossed $93,051 in the domestic market.
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A Pauper's grave is basically a cheap grave where poor people -commonly used in reference to musicians /artists who left this world with little money- are buried.A Pauper's grave in not a cheap grave and should not be treated as cheap. It is a free burial for someone that has no money to bury their family or used for an unknown . Otherwise know as a County Burial. Cemeteries have always had a Pauper grave section and is still used today. Very poor people did not have the money to bury their family and they still died. The United States Great Depression had many pauper burials as families were starving, and with no money for food, there was no money to bury their family. There should not be any shame in a pauper grave burial. Family still can gather monies together and put a headstone on their family member in the Pauper Section, no matter how many years it takes. It also does not matter if it is in the Pauper Grave Section, headstones are always excepted by the cemeteries. I have added a grave marker to a pauper burial in my family, 90 years after death and I do visit his grave.
About $60,000 a year
No doubt, they would of got paid money...
Yes you can make a lot of money grave digging if you own your own excavator and begin to contract with funeral homes. Trust me, I did.
Gorge Washington first made Money:)
washington
Grave Encounters grossed $2,151,887 worldwide.
They get their money from a place called a mint, where money is actually made!
United States Dollars are used in Washington DC.