My great great grandfather, Ferdinand Hahn died May 3 1910 and is buried in Camels Back Cemetery.
his grave in 1910
i was unable to find the grave but discovered a beautiful view from where the grave site might be
From the journal of his widow Doris:
"The funeral was set for 5 pm. Mr. Gass had told me earlier that only the English clergy was allowed to officiate in the cemetery; no out-of-towner. But Mr. Stoll gave a little meditation in English at the casket, on the porch where the mission Brothers and Sisters Stoll, Gass and Wiens had joined us mourners. Then began the heavy, heavy walk to the cemetery – through the city, past walkers, market people, dandies, etc. – without singing, without bells ringing – only with a heart filled with pain, on the same path which the dear Papa had so often loved to walk. Oh, I could hardly walk, and it was good that someone offered me a dandy which brought me the rest of the way. At the entrance of the cemetery, Chaplain Law, a slender man, stepped in front of the casket and guided the small procession down several slopes, reading Psalms, down to the lowest terrace of the picturesquely arranged cemetery of Mussourie. There, the four gentlemen let the casket down into the tomb, and there, our dear, dear father is now resting until the great resurrection day; resting from all his struggles, worries and works of this poor life, and sees the One in whom he has believed here and whom he has loved above all. But we mourn after him and will never, never forget him."
"The funeral was set for 5 pm. Mr. Gass had told me earlier that only the English clergy was allowed to officiate in the cemetery; no out-of-towner. But Mr. Stoll gave a little meditation in English at the casket, on the porch where the mission Brothers and Sisters Stoll, Gass and Wiens had joined us mourners. Then began the heavy, heavy walk to the cemetery – through the city, past walkers, market people, dandies, etc. – without singing, without bells ringing – only with a heart filled with pain, on the same path which the dear Papa had so often loved to walk. Oh, I could hardly walk, and it was good that someone offered me a dandy which brought me the rest of the way. At the entrance of the cemetery, Chaplain Law, a slender man, stepped in front of the casket and guided the small procession down several slopes, reading Psalms, down to the lowest terrace of the picturesquely arranged cemetery of Mussourie. There, the four gentlemen let the casket down into the tomb, and there, our dear, dear father is now resting until the great resurrection day; resting from all his struggles, worries and works of this poor life, and sees the One in whom he has believed here and whom he has loved above all. But we mourn after him and will never, never forget him."
Prem Singh, the watchman assures me he will keep looking. my allergies flared up so i had to call it quits
most graves are covered in moss or have lost all markings. i worked with the watchman to uncover about 12 graves to no avail.
possible path they took to the cemetary
lovely view in the way to cemetary
where they stayed at Himalaya Hotel
then
now
plot 7: i was told that was the number before i saw this map so Prem Singh promised to keep looking
Went up for 1.5 day in 2013, early July. The Tata Insitute behind the Landour Language school is wholeheartedly dumping their trash down the khud.
The Pollution in general, was much higher, although my son talked about rarefied airs, I felt it had really declined. Outside of the woods saved and protected by the school and other missionary places, everything is pretty packed, more small shops, cafe style, on the roads around the Sisters, however, the back is the same by the cemetery...again, thanks to private ownership...
Do you plan to go back again?