Saturday, 21 March 2026

Indiana Man Retires After 73 Years as a Grave Digger — It Started as a Temporary Gig Covering for One Week in 1952

Weirdness Level7/10

🌀 Very Strange

Indiana Man Retires After 73 Years as a Grave Digger — It Started as a Temporary Gig Covering for One Week in 1952

Allen McCloskey, 92, of Galveston, Indiana, has retired after 73 years as a grave digger — a job that started as a one-week favour back in 1952 and somehow never ended. He even dug the grave for his own wife. He did not bother telling his family he was quitting.

👽

Why It's Weird

Some stories exist in a category all their own, defying easy explanation or categorization. While the weirdness score is more modest, the story still offers a fascinating glimpse into life's unexpected moments.

The world’s longest-serving grave digger has finally hung up his shovel after more than 73 years.

Dedicated Allen McCloskey (USA) first entered the record books in 2021 when he’d earned the title for longest career as a grave digger with a total of 68 years 191 days.

Now at the age of 92, he’s finally putting his feet up for a well-earned rest after extending his record to 73 years 75 days.

His son Dean described it as the “end of an era”.

He said Allen had decided one day that it was “time” to stop working and that he’d quietly handed in his notice at Galveston Cemetery in Galveston, Indiana, but that he didn’t want any fuss or a party.

Dean explained in a Facebook post on a page dedicated to Allen’s work: “He was planning on digging for a few more weeks, but after a spell of not feeling well (even though he is feeling better now), we believe he has accepted his decision, both mentally and physically.

“We discovered this in a roundabout way. After all, as most of you know, it's very hard to get information out of him. He doesn’t talk about himself. After prying the information from him (his conversation with the sexton a few weeks ago), I asked, ‘Were you gonna tell us??’ His response was, ‘Well, I figured you'd hear about it sometime.’

“Translation: His humble self did not want a party thrown in his honour to celebrate this service he has done nearly all his life.”

When Allen first earned his world record, he became a pretty big talking point around the town, and was even featured on CBS Evening News where locals shared stories about what a helpful and “special” guy he is.

Dad-of-three Allen dug his first ever grave by hand in 1952 and even found the strength to dig the grave for his beloved wife Barbara when he lost her.

“Well, I figured she’d want me to do it,” he said.

He created the final resting places for thousands of people during his career, which he started sort of by accident after a grave digger asked him to cover for them for a week.

All these years later, he’s played a pivotal role in a very difficult time in the lives of his fellow Galveston residents.

He also has a reputation for doing odd jobs for townsfolk and refusing to let them pay him any money.

And while he may not want any fuss when it comes to the momentous ending of his record-breaking career, his children made sure he knows just how proud they are of him.

Read about more people putting their skills to record-breaking use in our Hobbies and Skills section.

Dean continued in the post: “So, we, collectively as a family, are jubilant in the fact he has decided to give it up, and is walking away on his own terms. No longer will we worry about his wellbeing while digging in inclement weather or excessive heat. No longer will we worry about equipment failures and burst hydraulic hoses on his vintage 1970s backhoe. No longer will we worry about him navigating several tons of steel over, around, and between costly monuments of delicate marble and granite. No longer will he have to miss events because of his unwavering dedication to the job.

How does this make you feel?

📱

Get Oddly Enough on iOS

Your daily dose of the world's weirdest, most wonderful news. Original articles, 100% autonomous.

Download on the App Store

You might also like 👀

Malta Will Pay Young Drivers $29,000 to Surrender Their License for Five Years
👽Huh

Malta Will Pay Young Drivers $29,000 to Surrender Their License for Five Years

Malta has launched a scheme offering young drivers €25,000 to surrender their driving licenses for five years — essentially paying people to stop wanting a car. The catch: once surrendered, the license is permanently suspended, and you'll need 15 hours of lessons to ever legally drive again. Initial interest has been described as "very high," which says something about either Malta's traffic or the state of millennial finances.

Oddity Central·
🌀
7
Flamin Hot Cheeto Shaped Like Charizard Sells for $87,840 — Sets Guinness Record for Most Expensive Videogame Likeness Corn Snack
👽Huh

Flamin Hot Cheeto Shaped Like Charizard Sells for $87,840 — Sets Guinness Record for Most Expensive Videogame Likeness Corn Snack

A Flamin Hot Cheeto bearing a passing resemblance to Charizard — dubbed Cheetozard — sold at auction for $87,840, setting a world record for the most expensive videogame likeness corn snack. The original owner bought it on eBay for $350 and is presumably doing fine.

Guinness World Records·
🌀
8
Japan Now Sells a Life-Size Psyduck Chair You Can Sit In When You're Feeling Overwhelmed
👽Huh

Japan Now Sells a Life-Size Psyduck Chair You Can Sit In When You're Feeling Overwhelmed

Japanese furniture maker Cellutane has created a life-sized Psyduck bead-filled sofa chair — because if you are going to have a stress-induced breakdown, you might as well do it inside a giant, perpetually overwhelmed Pokemon. The chair is stuffed with sugobeads for maximum sink-in comfort, has a machine-washable cover, and costs a very reasonable $183 for the privilege of being hugged by a creature who truly gets it.

SoraNews24·
🌀
7
Thai Woman Marries Two Austrian Men in One Ceremony — "Marry One, Nobody Remembers"
👽Huh

Thai Woman Marries Two Austrian Men in One Ceremony — "Marry One, Nobody Remembers"

Duangduan Ketsaro, a 37-year-old former singer-songwriter from Thailand, married two Austrian men — Roman and Macky, both police officers — in a single traditional ceremony in February, because if you're going to do something, you might as well make it memorable. Each groom brought a dowry of 1 million baht. Both ended up jumping into a pond.

NDTV·
🌀
8