Greenbrier County, West Virginia - Kincaid Family Cemetery, Neola, WV ********************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. ********************************************************************** ********************************************************************** The records for this work have been submitted by William Kincaid, smclinda @anet-stl.com, September 19, 1998. ********************************************************************** ********************************************************************** Kincaid Family Cemetery, Neola, West Virginia Sacred to the Memory of Col. Esquire James Kincaid who Departed This Life July the 19th, 1838 and in the 57th Year of His Age. Phebe Kincaid Fleshman Born April 15, 1795, Died January 16, 1858 In Memory of Eveline J. Fleshman Who Died Nov 26, 1868 Aged 35 Years and 9 Mo In Memory of Evaline S. Kincaid Who Departed This Life February the 6th 1837 in the 8th Year of Her Age In Memory of Marall Kincaid Who Died 1825 in the 2nd Year of Her Age Sacred to the Memory of Elizabeth Ann Kincaid Who Departed This Life May 8th, 1842 in the 26th Year of Her Age E ANN K In Memory of Elizabeth the Daughter of Michael Gillilan Departed This Life Dec the 17th 1841 in the 8th Month of Her Age EVAG Sacred to the Memory of Mary L. Dean Who Departed This Life April 7th, 1849 Aged 21 Years 10 Mo 7 Days MLD (There were at one time another 12 stones in this cemetery, most of them slate. One of the stones was likely that of Samuel Kincaid, Jr., son of Samuel Kincaid Sr., the original owner of this property and one of the four sons of Alexander Kincaid believed to have emigrated from Scotland to the British Colonies in 1746 after the Battle of Culloden. His father Samuel Sr. may have also been buried here as his death coincided closely with the acquisition of the land, but there is less reason to believe so. Due to the ravages of the weather, use of the cemetery as a horse pen, and past destructive clearing of heavy brush in order to make it accessible to the horses, these 12 old stones are lost forever, as soon will be the remaining stones. This is a tragic loss in the making due to the apparent lack of respect for this historic cemetery.)