Local Woman Writes Book on Steuben County Cemeteries

Photos

Eric Wensel / The Leader

Local historian Helen Brink and her schnoodle Cricket search for clues to the area's past history.

  

Yellow Pages

By Mary Perham
Posted Aug 29, 2010 @ 12:00 AM
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BATH | In an area as older than American Revolution and larger than Rhode Island, untold men, women and children lie quietly underground, in the shade and sun.

Those people helped carve Steuben County from raw wilderness, worked the land and built businesses. They fought in the early American wars, the world wars, the far-off wars. They raised families, and dreamed dreams.

They turned a county into a home.

And in many areas, no one even knows they are there.

“They are sacred places,” said Helen Kelly Brink, of Bath. “They are our history.”

So Brink and her co-partner, a mixed-breed schnoodle named Cricket, decided to go on an adventure, scouring the area to update information on cemeteries.

A member of the Steuben County Historical Society, Brink used former county Historian Charles Oliver’s extensive records to locate burial grounds.

However, Oliver’s records, completed in 1980, did not take into account the county’s 911 road name changes.

There were other dramatic changes, Brink said.

Long-gone roads or inaccurate directions made locating some old cemeteries difficult to find. In other areas, cemeteries had disappeared, due to neglect, or because they had been covered by roads.

Brink told town officials about the abandoned graveyards, and in many cases town workers cleared up the debris.

“I got some of my best support from highway crews. They were just great at fixing up,” Brink said.

It took Brink and Cricket four years and several return trips to locate information, now compiled on the county society book, “Steuben County Cemeteries – Good, Bad, and Gone.”

The book includes a list of all the cemeteries located in each of the 32 towns in the county, and includes the first person buried there, and other items of local interest. If the cemetery is no longer active, the last person buried also is listed.

Pictures of each cemetery are included in the book, along with general maps.

Directions to each location are available at the county historical society, Brink said.

The two-year odyssey was well worth the time and effort for Cricket and Brink, a retired school nurse from Rochester, who moved to the area some 10 years ago.

“We located a cemetery with its own two-holer (outhouse) and one that has a plot reserved for a U.S. president,” she wrote in the book’s forward. “We have visited overgrown and abandoned cemeteries, and ones that have been long gone, leaving no indication they existed.”

BATH | In an area as older than American Revolution and larger than Rhode Island, untold men, women and children lie quietly underground, in the shade and sun.

Those people helped carve Steuben County from raw wilderness, worked the land and built businesses. They fought in the early American wars, the world wars, the far-off wars. They raised families, and dreamed dreams.

They turned a county into a home.

And in many areas, no one even knows they are there.

“They are sacred places,” said Helen Kelly Brink, of Bath. “They are our history.”

So Brink and her co-partner, a mixed-breed schnoodle named Cricket, decided to go on an adventure, scouring the area to update information on cemeteries.

A member of the Steuben County Historical Society, Brink used former county Historian Charles Oliver’s extensive records to locate burial grounds.

However, Oliver’s records, completed in 1980, did not take into account the county’s 911 road name changes.

There were other dramatic changes, Brink said.

Long-gone roads or inaccurate directions made locating some old cemeteries difficult to find. In other areas, cemeteries had disappeared, due to neglect, or because they had been covered by roads.

Brink told town officials about the abandoned graveyards, and in many cases town workers cleared up the debris.

“I got some of my best support from highway crews. They were just great at fixing up,” Brink said.

It took Brink and Cricket four years and several return trips to locate information, now compiled on the county society book, “Steuben County Cemeteries – Good, Bad, and Gone.”

The book includes a list of all the cemeteries located in each of the 32 towns in the county, and includes the first person buried there, and other items of local interest. If the cemetery is no longer active, the last person buried also is listed.

Pictures of each cemetery are included in the book, along with general maps.

Directions to each location are available at the county historical society, Brink said.

The two-year odyssey was well worth the time and effort for Cricket and Brink, a retired school nurse from Rochester, who moved to the area some 10 years ago.

“We located a cemetery with its own two-holer (outhouse) and one that has a plot reserved for a U.S. president,” she wrote in the book’s forward. “We have visited overgrown and abandoned cemeteries, and ones that have been long gone, leaving no indication they existed.”

All the cemeteries are rich with stories – like the isolated Davenport Family Cemetery in Bath.

The plot for the former state senator and comptroller Ira Davenport and his wife, Lydia, also contains the graves of girls living in the orphanage they started near their home.

While some orphans grew to adulthood, and were buried later, other bleak tombstones tell of heartbreaking occasions: Little Helen Morgan dying on Christmas Day 1897 at the age of 5, while 10 days later Margaret Hoover, died at the age of five months. A few paces over, young Gertrude Gray died in October 1877. She was 8.

Brink’s quest isn’t over. She is now trying to locate information about a Rev. Abner Smith who died at the age of 96 in 1839 and is buried in a cemetery in Avoca. What intrigued Brink about this man of the cloth is his tombstone simply reads “Harvard graduate.”

So far, her sleuthing has uncovered he was a pastor in Darby, Conn. Records there only report he “went West,” she said.

Her eyes gleaming with anticipation, Brinks grinned.

“I can’t wait to find out more,” she said.

“Steuben County Cemeteries – Good, Bad, and Gone” is now available through the Steuben County Historical Society. For details, call 776-9930.

**

Leaf-Peeping Cemetery Tour

Sponsors:The Steuben County Historical Society and the Steuben County Historian’s Office. Open to SCHS members and non-members.

When:Oct. 11

Details:The Covered Wagon Bus Tour will leave the Magee House, in Bath, at 9 a.m.

Cemeteries in the tour include Avoca, Bath, Cohocton, Dansville, Fremont, Prattsburgh, Urbana, Wayland and Wheeler.

Reservationsmust be made by Sept. 15.

The non-refundable $55 cost includes a catered chicken dinner. Checks should be made to the Steuben County Historical Society and sent to P.O. Box 349, Bath, NY 14810. Include a self-addressed stamped envelope for if tickets should be mailed before the tour.

 

 

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