Isaac Nettles Gravestones Explained

Isaac Nettles Gravestones
Nearest City:Carlton, Alabama
Coordinates:31.3464°N -87.8681°W
Architect:Nettles, Issac Sr.
Added:February 24, 2000
Area:less than one acre
Refnum:00000141

The Isaac Nettles Gravestones are four unusual headstones in the Mount Nebo Baptist Church Cemetery near Carlton in rural Clarke County, Alabama, United States.[1] [2] Surveyed for the National Register of Historic Places' Clarke County Multiple Property Submission, they were added to the register on February 24, 2000.

History

Mount Nebo Baptist Church, a traditionally African American Baptist church, was established in the 19th century. The four Nettles markers are made of concrete and feature death masks, presumed by scholars to be of the people whose graves they mark. The gravestone of note are of Angel Ezella Nettles (death 1940), Selena (sometimes spelled Celina) Nettles (1800s–January 1940), Korean (sometimes spelled Cora) Nettles (January 1859–July 6, 1933), and Manul Burell (?–August 9, 1946). The marker for Selena Nettles was greatly damaged in 1979 during Hurricane Frederic, and what once displayed her upper torso, is now only a gravestone base.[3]

They are attributed to Isaac "Ike" Nettles, a local man who created them between 1933 and 1946. When surveyed in 2000 the markers had not weathered well, with only the most ornate one, with three individual masks on one marker, in good condition.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=00000141}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Nettles, Isaac, Gravestones ]. February 17, 2023 . National Park Service. With
  2. Web site: Kazek . Kelly . 2018-10-18 . 17 fascinating Alabama cemeteries and monuments of national significance . 2023-02-18 . al.com . en.
  3. Book: Brown, Alan . Eerie Alabama: Chilling Tales from the Heart of Dixie . 2019 . Arcadia Publishing . 978-1-4671-4167-3 . 121 . en.
  4. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=64500005}} Clarke County MPS]. National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service . February 26, 2011.