Tag Archives: Woodlawn Cemetery

Odd-uments!

Have you ever found any odd-uments? That’s my new word (copyright!) for monuments that are surprising, quirky, or curious. The Finger Lakes, unsurprisingly given our history of social, religious, and technological experiment, has plenty of them.

In 1793 Charles Williamson founded Bath near the Conhocton River. His job was to sell 1.2 million acres of land between Seneca Lake and the Genesee River, but he also served in multiple public offices and engineered creation of Steuben County. So when Daughters of the American Revolution honored him in 1929 with a plaque on a large boulder in Pulteney Square, site of his original land clearing, it wasn’t really surprising. Not surprising except that while Mr. Williamson WAS in the American Revolution – he was on the other side. While the Scottish officer was in house arrest as a P.O.W. he married an American and gained U. S. citizenship… and eventually, recognition by the D.A.R.

The Pilgrims hadn’t even heard of the Mayflower when a Basque explorer remembered only as Pabos died on June 10, 1618, a long, long way from home. A burial plaque was found near today’s Victor almost three centuries later, and some fifty years after THAT, historian and newsman J. Sheldon Fisher decided that the man’s memory should be preserved. Sheldon told me that he’d always wanted to build a pyramid, so he rounded up some local Boy Scouts and together they did just that. The seven-foot monument still stands on Wagnum Road, near the grave – now over four centuries old – of the all-but-forgotten explorer.

Rochester’s huge Mount Hope Cemetery includes every faith, ethnicity, and time period in the city’s history. There are special sections for Civil War veterans, 19th-century unknowns, and firefighters. Not to mention a monument to that forgotten hero of long ago, the fireHORSE. By getting the fire company to the fires FAST they saved countless lives, often at risk to their own. They’re entitled to a little recognition.

On Main Street in Prattsburgh is a monument from the Knights of Cyprus “To Madame Sarah Bernhardt, the greatest actress in the world.” Her 19th-century “lyric fire and divine voice” were indeed unforgettable, but the Knights of Cyprus existed only in the imagination of of Charles Danford Bean, who created the monument to the Divine Sarah.

At a grave in Elmira’s Woodlawn Cemetery, a stone obelisk towers twelve feet tall. In nautical terms that’s exactly two fathoms or, as a leadsman testing depths on the Mississippi River would call out, “by the mark, twain!” Samuel Clemens lies here.

It looks like a micro-spaceship, coming in for a landing on Main Street in Lima. But it’s actually a tiny old-time spherical bank vault, commemorating that exciting day in 1915 when Livingston County suffered its first bank robbery. As we understand it the case is still unsolved, but we suppose that the reward offer has expired.

Western New York is apple country. On Boughton Road in East Bloomfield is an easy-to-miss stone with a plaque commemorating the birth of the Northern Spy, one of dozens of strains originating in New York.

“Believe It Or Not,” a Canisteo hillside on Greenwood Street has a living sign spelling out the town’s name with 217 white pine trees. When created back in 1933 it may have been a guide for aircraft, and Robert Ripley featured it in his “Believe it Or Not” newspaper cartoon. Such hillside features are uncommon east of the Mississippi, and even more uncommon for being formed with living trees.

No doubt there’s more! Do YOU know of any odd-uments?

A Walk in the Cemetery

Looking for a place to take a walk? Think about the cemetery. Cemeteries are quiet, they have roads to stroll on, you’re not scrambling out of traffic, the settings are usually pleasant, and you can do some bird watching at the same time, or maybe connect with history.

PLEASANT VALLEY CEMETERY outside Hammondsport goes back to the 1790s, but the star “attraction” is Glenn Curtiss. Until quite recently there were still people living who had attended Glenn’s burial in 1930, or taken part in the 10-plane flyover. He repeatedly pushed American aviation to higher levels than anyone expected, before dying at 52.

ELMWOOD CEMETERY in Caton has Steuben County’s first Civil War memorial, a short obelisk. BATH NATIONAL CEMETERY has a tall obelisk while NONDAGA in Bath has a monument and flagpole. There are Civil War statues at CLEARVIEW (North Cohocton) and HORNELL RURAL CEMETERY, and a Civil War cannon at HOPE (Campbell).

One section of Bath National is dedicated to 18 unknown soldiers from the War of 1812, found in Canada and reinterred with joint honors by both nations. Also while you’re at Bath National – look at all the religious and philosophical symbols now authorized on military headstones – a far cry from the formerly ubiquitous Roman cross, with an occasional Star of David thrown in.

WOODLAWN NATIONAL CEMETERY in Elmira is the resting place for many Confederate soldiers who died in the “Hellmira” prison camp. The civilian portion of Woodlawn includes the graves of Underground Railroad leader John Jones, Heisman Trophy winner Ernie Davis, and Samuel L. Clemens, whose gravestone measures two fathoms – Mark Twain.

ST. MARY’S CEMETERY in Corning includes a monumental arch that honors 19 men and boys, mostly glassworkers from Corning, killed in an Ohio train crash in 1891. HOPE CEMETERY ANNEX in Corning has a sweeping terraced space where members of the Houghton family are buried. (It looks at first like Albert Speer designed a Japanese garden, but it actually works.)

From Canisteo’s WOODLAWN CEMETERY you can enjoy the “living sign,” but scrounge around a little and you may find two stones inscribed “K.K.K.” a hundred years ago, by people who thought that joining the Ku Klux Klan was something to be proud of.

Within living memory sheep used to graze in PRATTSBURGH PIONEER CEMETERY, as a way of keeping the grass cut. PIONEER CEMETERY in Bath goes back to 1793, the first year of the community’s existence, when founder Charles Williamson buried his six year-old daughter who died of Genesee fever (probably malaria).

At TOWNSEND-ERWIN CEMETERY you can visit the gravestone of Benjamin Patterson (from Patterson Inn fame). But you’re not necessarily visiting “Hunter Patterson,” since the place has been flooded so often, and stones so often washed out of place, that nobody’s sure whether many of them are still where they started out. Even so, it’s a lovely setting.

The jewel of cemeteries for our region is, of course, 200-acre MOUNT HOPE in Rochester. It’s a good place to walk while you’re taking a break from visiting at Strong Hospital, or Highland Hospital. It’s the final resting place for luminaries such as freedom fighters Frederick Douglass and Susan B. Anthony, newspaper tycoon Frank Gannett, numerous Strongs, many Rochesters, Mr. Bausch AND Mr. Lomb, and Seth Green, the father of pisciculture.

Think about wandering your cemetery. It may help you find your place in the web of life.