The year of the cemetery's feng shui was 1797 AD. After many more years, his family fell into decline and he had to sell his own estate. Out of love for his son, he made a request to the buyer: my son's tomb must be preserved as part of the land forever. He carefully wrote this request into the contract. The grass on the grave turned green and then yellow, year after year. As time passed, the owners of the land changed again and again. During the process of a hundred years of change, the child's name was lost. However, the unnamed child's tomb remained intact under the protection of one contract after another.
Decades later, this auspicious land was designated by the government for General Grant. The New York City government, in accordance with the contract regarding the cemetery, preserved the unnamed child's tomb. General Grant was buried next to the unnamed child's grave. The lonely child, who had been alone for a hundred years, now had a giant as a companion. General Grant was the 18th President of the United States and the commander of the Northern Army during the Civil War. It is indeed one of the world's greatest wonders that such a heroic general, who altered history, would be buried next to an unnamed child.
In 1997, which marked the 200th anniversary of the child's death, then New York City Mayor Giuliani came to the Riverside Park area where General Grant's mausoleum was located, to grandly commemorate the 120th anniversary of General Grant's death. At the same time, Mayor Giuliani, as the representative of the landowner, personally signed a contract, promising to keep the unnamed child's grave preserved forever, and had this story engraved on the tombstone, placed next to the unnamed child's grave. If the child's father were to know from beyond the grave that the contract had remained unchanged after a hundred years of circulation, he would surely rest in peace.
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