Deed for Subdivision No. 29 of a cemetery in the Town of Fleming, Cayuga Co., New York issued by John Fries to George Peterson and Mores Goolde and witnessed by L. S. Tryon on 25 February 1834 |
The Cemetery Deed
This document came into my possession by purchase from an an internet seller. I was kindly notified of its availability by an e-mail from a person who noticed that I maintain Find A Grave memorials for some of the Peterson family. As shown above, the Cemetery Deed for Subdivision No. 29 was received by George Peterson and Mores Goolde from John Fries as Trustee for the owners of an unidentified burying ground near "Asel P. Bennets" residence in the Town of Fleming, Cayuga Co., New York. The Deed was executed at Auburn, Cayuga Co., New York and is dated 25 February 1834. The transaction was witnessed by Levi S. Tryon, a prominent manufacturer in Owasco and, later, farmer in the Town of Fleming.
George Peterson
George Peterson, who appears in some early New Jersey records as Joris Peitersen, was the son of Cornelius Peterson and Hannah (Annatie) Parsell. He was born in 1768 and baptized at Neshanic, Somerset Co., New Jersey. George married Mary (Maria) Parcells. The Peterson family removed from New Jersey to the western shore of Owasco Lake in 1796 and settled a large tract of land in what was later the Town of Fleming, Cayuga Co., New York. An 1853 map of Fleming shows the residences of George Peterson and a son, Isaac, south of present-day Mobbs Road near Vannest Brook (now spelled Veness Brook) in Lot 75 (not labeled on map), south of Lot 66. George Peterson was 66 years old at the time the deed was executed.
Mores Goolde
This name may be a phonetic spelling for Morris Gould, if such a person resided in Fleming. I found no record for a Morris Gould in Fleming at this time. There was a Peterson-Gould marriage, however. George Peterson's sister, Anna, married John Gould. They are buried in Sand Beach Cemetery in the Town of Fleming. Little else about this couple is readily found. It may be that Morris Gould was a son or brother of John Gould.
Levi S. Tryon
Levi S. Tryon was born at Sunderland, Franklin Co., Massachusetts in 1779. He is said to have come in from Connecticut ca. 1800 and settled in Owasco.Levi sold his property to the Owasco Canal Company and purchased a farm in the Town of Fleming, probably relatively soon after his mill burned. His farm appears on the 1853 map of Fleming on Lots 82 and 83, quite near the farm of George Peterson; however, at the time the Cemetery Deed was signed, it is possible that Levi had not yet removed from Owasco. One of Levi's grandchildren, Howard Tryon, would later marry Jennie Peterson, a great-grandniece of George Peterson.
"On the east side of the outlet near Swift's dam, Levi S. Tryon in 1805 erected a clothing works that included machinery for fulling, carding, dyeing and dressing cloth. At that time it was considered 'the most complete works of the kind west of Albany' and Tryon continued the operation until the winter of 1835 when the buildings were destroyed by fire. . . ."
-- Sheila Tucker, Thomas Tryniski (scan), Roger Post (transcriber), Legends in the Dust - Phase Two of the Dream (Auburn, Cayuga Co., NY, The Citizen, Sunday, 9 February 1975), Old Fulton New York Post Cards http://www.fultonhistory.com
John Fries
John Fries was the son of Adam and Elizabeth Fries. Adam was an early settler of Auburn in 1796. He eventually took up more than 640 acres of land in Owasco, along the east side of the Owasco Outlet (now called the Owasco River). Adam Fries must have been well acquainted with George Peterson because in 1811 they jointly subscribed to purchase one $20 share in the building fund for an Academy to be built at Auburn. In addition, Adam and George had been among the original subscribers to the Building Fund for construction of the Sand Beach Church in 1807. George Peterson likely knew Adam's son John, as well.
Asel P. Bennet (Asahel P. Bennett)
The Cemetery Deed references a burying ground near "Asel P. Bennets" residence. Asahel P. Bennett owned a tract of land along the Owasco Outlet in the Town of Fleming. The land included property between present-day Lake Avenue and the Outlet. Asahel's Will directed setting off 40 acres of his property between the road (presumably Lake Avenue from the description) and the outlet from the north line of Lot 67 southward as far as needed. Lot 67 lies mainly in Owasco but includes an area on the west (Fleming) side of the Outlet, too. A further directive required setting off 10 acres of lowlands between Asahel's house and the lake shore. Finding the location of Asahel's house would require further research, but the Will directive seems to place the house near the present-day traffic circle on State Route 38. An 1853 map of Fleming does identify the residence of an F. Bennett on Lake Avenue in the area occupied by present-day St. Joseph's Cemetery.Sand Beach Cemetery
Identification of the burying ground referenced in the Cemetery Deed of George Peterson and Mores Goolde isn't certain. The closest cemetery to Asahel Bennett's property was Sand Beach, near the present-day intersection of Lake Avenue and State Route 38 in the Town of Fleming. The first increment of Sand Beach Cemetery, which has burials dating to 1812, was managed by the Protestant Dutch Church at the Owasco Outlet (Sand Beach Reformed Church) and had been in operation for several decades by 1834. This portion of the Cemetery is directly behind the former Sand Beach Church. Deeds for this area probably would have been handled through the Church rather than by John Fries. Galpin Hill Cemetery also was not far from Asahel Bennett's land, but it had burials dating to 1801. In either case, the cemetery name would presumably appear on the Cemetery Deed if additional lots were being sold.
The absence of a well-recognized cemetery name on the Deed may indicate that the burying ground was relatively new in 1834. George Peterson was buried within the present-day limits of Sand Beach Cemetery in 1858. George's burial location suggests that his Deed was for the second increment added to Sand Beach Cemetery. The second increment originally was managed by the Owasco Cemetery Association and may well have been needed by 1834 as the small strip behind the Church became full.