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Princeton Cemetery


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"Princeton Cemetery "If tombstones could talk" The History and intrigue of the Princeton Cemetery Circ.: 1757 -Pricilla E. Hayes When the two brothers came in to buy plots in Princeton Cemetery for their murdered parents, they made Claude Sutphen slightly uneasy. On the face of it, the brothers were simply bringing their parents home to Princeton, where the family had lived for many years. After Jose and Mary Menendez were resting in the plots their sons had selected, Mr. Sutphen--and the world--discovered that the brothers had indeed been hiding something. Lyle and Erik Menendez admitted that they had murdered their own parents. Being in jail has at least temporarily derailed their plans for buying several more grave sites for relatives at the Princeton Cemetery. Probably all of us have stared at gravestones and wished they could speak--in fact, suspected they could tell stories like this one. Mr. Sutphen, Superintendent at the cemetery, and the person in charge of helping people select grave sites and arrange burials there, has had 43 years to collect stories. He and several members of the cemetery committee at the Nassau Presbyterian Church, which owns the cemetery, have worked for years to give the stones and the cemetery a voice all their own. Of course, the cemetery has provided plenty of material to work with. From the start, Nassau Presbyterian has made cemetery plots available for purchase by anyone, no matter what their religion, race, or natio"
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