160 PROCEEBTNGS OF THE [July, 1887. 



27. Momiment to Schroder. 



Obelisk has fallen nearly S., tilted apparently over the Southern edge of its 

 basal surface. * 



Bethel Church. 



28. Monument to Charles Smith. 



Direction of Eastern and Western faces of pedestal, is N, 22° W. ; the obe- 

 hsk is rotated with the sun 7", and its centre lies a Httle N. of its original po- 

 sition. 



29. Monument to Matthew "WiUiam Cross. 



A marble slab, 6 feet by 3, on six pillars about 2^ feet high ; direction of its 

 narrowest sides, the Eastern and Western ones, was originally N. SO"" W., they 

 now lie N. 5° W., being rotated with the sun about 25°. The slab has rotated 

 about its NE. angle, which still rests on its own pillar, but httle disturbed from 

 its original position except by the rotation. In its rotation the slab has carried 

 the top of the Southeastern pillar inwards, and it now lies under the slab, 

 nearly parallel to the present direction of the longer side ; the N. W. pillar has 

 fallen outward, broken in the fall but lying nearly in the present- du'ection of 

 the shorter side; the S.W. pillar -hes in a Northeasterly and Southwesterly 

 direction, nearly parallel to the coiTespondiag diagonal of the present position 

 of the slab. It hes entirely outside of the area formerly covered by the slab, 

 but with its top now only a few inches from the former place of its foot, while 

 the foot is the farthest away. 



Magnolia Cemetery. 



30. Monument to O. Guerard. 



An obehsk, 16 ft. high surmounted by square vase or urn. The urn already 

 replaced at time of my visit, had been found on the ground, in a perfectly up- 

 right position on its base, at a spot pointed out to me, 3 ft. 6 in. N. by E. from 

 centre of obehsk. The obelisk had been rotated, in which direction my inform- 

 ant could not say, and I could not now determine, as it had been replaced. 



31. Monument to H. Clark. 



A fluted column, was found with centre of basal surface 1^ inches from its 

 original position towards the S. E. , the circumference of that surface proj ecting. 

 1 inch over the edge of the surbase of the pedestal. The wreath surmounting 

 the column, which originally faced nearly N. now faces a few degrees W. of N. 



32. Monument to the Charleston Light Dragoons. 



An obehsk siimmit 31 ft. above the soil, and mounted on an elevated pedes- 



♦ This cemetery is Nortli of the last, and only separated from it by a wooden 

 paling fence. The sides of the pedestals In this, and each of the preceding cemeteries, 

 face the cardinal points of the horizon approximately. 



"Where distance of fallen object from pedestal is not given, it lay at its foot, or quite 

 near it. 



