Little House On Wheels

 

"Whos Who" in The Elmwood Cemetery

Nancy Tyler Holmes
Great-grandmother of President Harry S. Truman.

 

 

Ann Ralston James
Wife of famous outlaw, Frank James.

 

 

Constance Rowe
The first-born child of a TITANIC Victim and Founder of McLean, Texas, Alfred Rowe and his wife, Constance


 

Robert M. Snyder
Ha Ha Tonka State Park's castle ruins was once his dream of paradise, but he never saw it as a reality. Robert purchased 2500 acres of Ozark land and set out to build his castle high on the bluffs above the spring below, but he was killed in an auto accident in 1906 before it was ever close to finished. His sons had it finished several years after his death and they opened it as a hotel before a massive fire destroyed it in 1945. The Snyder family sold the estate and acreage to the state of Missouri and it is now Ha Ha Tonka State Park at Camdenton, MO., One of Missouri's most visited tourist spots.

 

 

Thomas Speers
First police chief of Kansas City from 1874-1895.


 

For More Information Go To Their Website.

Elmwood Cemetery

Kansas City Missouri

September 30, 2007

Page 1 of 2

 

Missouri Facts

State Flower: White Hawthorn
State Animal: Mule
State Tree: Dogwood
State Bird: Bluebird
State Song: Missouri Waltz
State Insect: Honey Bee
State Fossil: Crinoid
Nickname: Show Me State
State Gemstone: Fresh water pearl

State Rock:  Mozarkite

State Musical Instrument:  Fiddle

State Folk Dance:  Square Dance
Origin of name: Indian word which means "town of the large canoe."

 

 

Missouri Waltz

Hush-a-bye, ma baby, slumbertime is comin' soon;
Rest yo' head upon my breast while Mommy hums a tune;
The sandman is callin' where shadows are fallin',
While the soft breezes sigh as in days long gone by.

Way down in Missouri where I heard this melody,
When I was a little child upon my Mommy's knee;
The old folks were hummin'; their banjos were strummin';
So sweet and low.

Strum, strum, strum, strum, strum,
Seems I hear those banjos playin' once again,
Hum, hum, hum, hum, hum,
That same old plaintive strain.

Hear that mournful melody,
It just haunts you the whole day long,
And you wander in dreams back to Dixie, it seems,
When you hear that old time song.

Hush-a-bye ma baby, go to sleep on Mommy's knee,
Journey back to Dixieland in dreams again with me;
It seems like your Mommy is there once again,
And the old folks were strummin' that same old refrain.

Way down in Missouri where I learned this lullaby,
When the stars were blinkin' and the moon was climbin' high,
Seems I hear voices low, as in days long ago,
Singin' hush-a-bye.

 

arranged by Frederick Knight Logan from a melody by John Valentine Eppel, with lyrics by J. R. Shannon