| Table monument with marble panel, which formerly bore a long Latin inscription, now entirely defaced, to the 
effect that it covered Patrick Jackson, 1689, and Margaret Garden his wife.  
 Collection of Epitaphs and Monumental Inscriptions Chiefly in Scotland (1834) Robert Monteith 
 Lector, si cujus ossa marmor hoc tegit, scire cupis, lege; & hic cineres civis honesti Patricii Jacksoni
 invenies: qui, Deum pietate, vitam innocentia, domum pradentia, amicos officiis, proximos benefactis demeruit.
 Moriens, domum lachrymis, amicos luctu, proximos
 doIore, cumulavit. Obiit 31 Martii anno 1689.
 ćtatis suć 39. Uxor ejus Margareta Garden, in mariti
 & patrui Patricii Jackson, qui obiit Maii 1668. ćtatis
 58, Conjugisque ejus Margaretć Jackson, quć obiit
 Januarii 1675. ćtatis 70, Memoriam monumentum
 hoc extrui curavit.
 Reader, if you desire to know, whose bones this
 monument covers, read, and you shall find, it contains
 the ashes of an honest citizen Patrick Jackson, who was
 dear to God for piety, to his household for prudence, to
 his friends for kindness and to his neighbours for good
 services: by his death, he loaded his family with tears,
 His friends with grief and his neighbours with sorrow.
 He died 31st March in the year 1689 and of his age 39.
 . His wife Margaret Garden, to the memory of her husband and of her uncle Patrick
 Jackson, who died in May 1668, aged 58
 and of his wife Margaret Jackson, who died in January 1675 Aged 70, caused this monument to be erected. 
 
 Revised James T Haggart. Source:RT 
 James J. Haggart in memory of his Grandfather and Grandmother. Source: The Book of the Howff, ŠLibraries, Leisure and Culture 
Dundee, Local History Centre & is reproduced with kind permission.
 |