Obits: The Ouachita Telegraph 1877 Obits, Morehouse parish excerpts These older obituaries are being transcribed by Ms. Lora Peppers at the Ouachita Parish Library. We would like to thank Lora Peppers for sharing her work with the Morehouse Parish Archives Project. Thanks Lora! ********************************************** Copyright. All rights reserved. http://usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://usgwarchives.net/la/lafiles.htm ********************************************** The Ouachita Telegraph Friday, October 19, 1877 Page 3, Column 2 On the top of the high hill or bluff overlooking Bayou Sara, and the surrounding country, and to the right of the road leading to the river, is a solitary grave – that of an individual by the name of Archibald Williams, who died of delirium tremens some thirty years ago, and who we are told was buried there at his request, and with a bottle of brandy in his coffin and under his head. – Clinton Democrat. In a cemetery some eight miles north of Monroe, on the Monroe and Bastrop road, may be seen a similar grave, made, we known not when, over which was placed at the request of the deceased, and still marks the spot, a jug and glass. – Morehouse Clarion. The reference of the Clarion is doubtless to the grave of the late Judge J.N.T. Richardson who made, we have been told, a request to have a jug and goblet put over his grave. It was one of the Judge’s eccentricities – not the suggestion of intemperate habits. NOTE: The Friday, October 26, 1877 Ouachita Telegraph clarifies, by saying that the objects on the grave are an urn and a goblet (Page 3, Column 1). The Ouachita Telegraph Friday, December 14, 1877 Page 3, Column 1 Jim McClellan, a freedman, is to be hanged to-day in Bastrop for the assassination of Mr. Nick Evans, a worthy and estimable citizen of Morehouse, about a year ago. Jim escaped from the parish, but was arrested in Caldwell, we believe, shortly after, and was carried to Bastrop and put in jail. He had his trial about four weeks ago, was convicted, sentenced to be hanged, and Gov. Nicholls orders his execution to-day. Considering that the doomed man gave the victim of his malice no notice or warning of death whatever, he cannot complain of any haste in his execution.