Always Sunny Philadelphia Always Sunny In Always Philadelphia
patricksaurus on
“Aspasia” sounds suspiciously like “a space here.”
AdWhich7355 on
I’m assuming they didn’t get buried there maybe? So they never filled it in
Jedibri81 on
She’s still alive
_Schrodingers_Gat_ on
Lady was very guarded about her age, took that shit to the grave.
theuserwithoutaname on
“your gravestone says you never died”
Gone_For_Lunch on

LetsTalkAboutGuns on
Buried alive. Schrödinger’s human.
Bebinn on
Family probably didn’t have the money for the engraving.
juliefryy on
There are several of these in the cemetery near where I live. The husband dies and the wife’s doesn’t have a death date. My guess is that she remarried and moved and is now buried next to latest husband.
KarmicRage on
She was still alive when they threw her in there, didn’t know when she actually died lol
chillbruhdamn on
My great grandma had her headstone made when her husband’s was after he passed. It read 1910-19__. She lived to 98 years old and they had to change her headstone because she lived past 2000. This reminded me of her.
Wizdad-1000 on

VillageAccurate4931 on
It’s wild to think someone could have lived such a long time ago and their final date was never added. Makes you wonder what happened.
jason2354 on
Can you unbury the partially buried headstone to the left for me?
Additional_Comment99 on
Many times family members did not know loved ones had burial plots pre purchased for themselves and they go unused. My family bought a large burial plots with 30+ graves, if that was not shared amongst family the plots would have remained unused.
During this period families moved on frequently following tragedy or difficulty. A death of a father or major illness could have caused an entire family to pack up and move back east to be closer to other family for help.
I am currently in the middle of researching an old cemetery plot from 1896 to discover if it an ancestor I have been searching for in vain for at least 30 years. I had found no clues to her whereabouts in any census in known family locations in the decades she would have lived. Not in her birthplace, not in any states my family had lived or traveled through. And in a weird irony I searched find a grave and found her name in the cemetery in the town I have lived for 38 years. No relatives have been known to live here, it was part of Indian territory before it became a state. She was native American. She is not buried near any relatives. Nor is any relative listed in cemetery records. The state has no death certificate. I have been told to check for local records, which I am trying to do, but the town was only a few years old at the time of her death.
My grandfather’s headstone is like this. When my grandmother passed away he eventually met and married a woman who was a teacher in Georgia. He moved down there and passed away a few years later, so his grave down there is fully marked, but the stone he shares with my grandmother still only lists his birth year.
R-O-U-Ssdontexist on
Vampire; this is proof
Mogui- on
Look her up, “currently arrested for pretending to sell immortality elixir”
bankrupt_bezos on
It’s Doc Brown’s. He went into the future with Clara.
EnchantingGirl2 on
Well, I guess it’s Edward Cullen’s sister 🤣
Trieditwonce on
She walks among us…
goobly_goo on
That’s a vampire.
highoncatnipbrownies on
It’s not unfinished. They were turned into a vampire. It’s perfectly accurate.
commissar-bawkses on

Or, they’re an immortal
Attackontitangoat on
Back to the future??
Guardian-King on
That’s one old mother fucker
Acceptable_Cow4471 on
Another mystery waiting for its epitaph…
Minyun on
r/redditsniper
Piff-Iz-Da-Answer on
That is the grave stone of the undead
Devoid of life as we humans understand it
Miss Aspasia lacks a heartbeat she does not breath
34 Comments
Maybe she’s still alive. 142 years young.
Dr Emmett Brown

Always Sunny Philadelphia Always Sunny In Always Philadelphia
“Aspasia” sounds suspiciously like “a space here.”
I’m assuming they didn’t get buried there maybe? So they never filled it in
She’s still alive
Lady was very guarded about her age, took that shit to the grave.
“your gravestone says you never died”

Buried alive. Schrödinger’s human.
Family probably didn’t have the money for the engraving.
There are several of these in the cemetery near where I live. The husband dies and the wife’s doesn’t have a death date. My guess is that she remarried and moved and is now buried next to latest husband.
She was still alive when they threw her in there, didn’t know when she actually died lol
My great grandma had her headstone made when her husband’s was after he passed. It read 1910-19__. She lived to 98 years old and they had to change her headstone because she lived past 2000. This reminded me of her.

It’s wild to think someone could have lived such a long time ago and their final date was never added. Makes you wonder what happened.
Can you unbury the partially buried headstone to the left for me?
Many times family members did not know loved ones had burial plots pre purchased for themselves and they go unused. My family bought a large burial plots with 30+ graves, if that was not shared amongst family the plots would have remained unused.
During this period families moved on frequently following tragedy or difficulty. A death of a father or major illness could have caused an entire family to pack up and move back east to be closer to other family for help.
I am currently in the middle of researching an old cemetery plot from 1896 to discover if it an ancestor I have been searching for in vain for at least 30 years. I had found no clues to her whereabouts in any census in known family locations in the decades she would have lived. Not in her birthplace, not in any states my family had lived or traveled through. And in a weird irony I searched find a grave and found her name in the cemetery in the town I have lived for 38 years. No relatives have been known to live here, it was part of Indian territory before it became a state. She was native American. She is not buried near any relatives. Nor is any relative listed in cemetery records. The state has no death certificate. I have been told to check for local records, which I am trying to do, but the town was only a few years old at the time of her death.
Aspasia: https://youtu.be/_pXrkM-OLvs
My grandfather’s headstone is like this. When my grandmother passed away he eventually met and married a woman who was a teacher in Georgia. He moved down there and passed away a few years later, so his grave down there is fully marked, but the stone he shares with my grandmother still only lists his birth year.
Vampire; this is proof
Look her up, “currently arrested for pretending to sell immortality elixir”
It’s Doc Brown’s. He went into the future with Clara.
Well, I guess it’s Edward Cullen’s sister 🤣
She walks among us…
That’s a vampire.
It’s not unfinished. They were turned into a vampire. It’s perfectly accurate.

Or, they’re an immortal
Back to the future??
That’s one old mother fucker
Another mystery waiting for its epitaph…
r/redditsniper
That is the grave stone of the undead
Devoid of life as we humans understand it
Miss Aspasia lacks a heartbeat she does not breath
Stuck in a state between dead and alive.