Purdytown Cemetery
Moving the Purdytown Cemetery.
|
The inundation of a hydroelectric reservoir
typically entails at least some relocation of residents. Farms,
barns, roads and other infrastructure in the path of the rising
water must be moved to higher ground. When Lake Wallenpaupack
filled in during the summer of 1924, Pennsylvania Power &
Light Co. was faced with the ticklish task of moving an entire
cemetery to higher ground. |
 |
At first, PP&L staff thought there were approximately 20 bodies
buried in the Purdytown cemetery on what was then known as the
Maud Andrews property in Paupack Township of Wayne County. But
by the time the cemetery was moved to a new site along the Wilsonville-Lakeville
Road in Paupack Township, contractors had identified 54 bodies
in the 100-year-old burial ground.
In a June 10, 1924, Wayne County court order, Pennsylvania Power
& Light Co. was given authorization to move the Purdy Cemetery
about one-half mile, out of the path of the waters backed up by
the dam being built near Wilsonville. The family cemetery had
been abandoned for at least 50 years, and PP&L had advertised
in the local
Hawley Times its intentions of moving the
cemetery that summer. Since "no relatives or friends of the
dead having asked for permission to remove the remains at their
own expenses," the court ordered that PP&L could remove
the bodies at its own expense. PP&L contracted with Hawley
undertaker George Teeter to move the bodies from the Purdy Cemetery
to the new burial ground. Teeter was to be paid a flat rate of
$450 for moving what was originally estimated to be 20 bodies.
Work on relocating the Purdy Cemetery began the third week of
August.
At first, rumors in the surrounding cornmunities suggested that
workmen had found no bodies. "It has been reported that workmen
have been unable to find any trace 'of coffins or bodies in a
large number of graves," a news item in the
Sunbury Daily
Item of Aug. 20, 1924, reported. "Is the removal of markers
and tombstones equivalent to removal of bodies from their graves?"
In reality, the opposite was the case. Teeter and his crew found
human remains in nearly every grave. Tracing burial records in
the county courthouse, Teeter found that the earliest burials
in the Purdy Cemetery dated to 1810. Elder William Purdy, the
pastor of the Baptist Church of Palmyra and his wife Rachel, the
people for whom the cemetery was named, were buried within four
years of each other between 1824 and 1828. All told, there were
considerably more than 20 burials in the cemetery. "After
the old site was thoroughly cleared of trees and underbrush in
preparing to open the graves, it was found that there were more
graves there than the original count seemed to show when Mr. Teeter
and I made this count together," PP&Ls W.C. Anderson
wrote John Wise in Allentown on August 7. "There are 27 or
28 well marked graves having one or two stone markers each, instead
of 20 as we previously thought were there, and there are plain
indications of still more graves which are not so distinctly marked
with the names of individuals buried in them."
All told, there were 56 graves in the Purdy Cemetery. In a commentary
on the child mortality rate in the 19th century, at least 30 of
the bodies in the cemetery were infants or children. PP&L
agreed to pay Teeter $20 per body for moving and reinterring the
bodies in the cemetery, and the job was essentially completed
by the end of August 1924. It was one of the more unique relocation
efforts of the hydroelectric era in Pennsylvania.
Description of graves in Purdytown
Cemetery
Transferred from old to new location,
August 19, 1924
Information provided by PP&L
|
Grave # |
Description |
remains found |
|
1 |
Child |
Found skull and few bones |
|
2 |
Stacy, Son of Abbot and Eliza Purdy. Died Sept. 12, 1844 - Age
2 yrs., 9 mos., 13 days |
Few bones |
|
3 |
Child |
mold |
|
4 |
Adult |
main part of skeleton |
|
5 |
Van Vliet, Son of John and Miriam Boman. Died July 5, 1842 -
Age 22 yrs., 2 mos., 28 days. |
bones |
|
6 |
Child |
mold |
|
7 |
Child |
piece of skull and mold |
|
8 |
Infant |
mold |
|
9 |
Child |
skull and few bones |
|
10 |
Child |
skull and few bones |
|
11 |
Celestia U., daughter of Samuel C. and Fanny Purdy. Died April
24, 1842 - Age 1 yr., 11 mos., 16 days. |
skull and number of bones |
|
12 |
Peter Purdy - Died Aug. 20. 1835 - Age 53 yrs., 10 mos., 16 days. |
main part of skeleton |
|
13 |
Polly, wife of Peter Purdy. Died Jan. 23, 1832 |
all of skeleton |
|
14 |
Dorrance, son of Peter and Polly Purdy. Died Jan. 25, 1843 -
|Age 29 yrs., 4 mos., 16 days. |
all of skeleton |
|
15 |
Adult |
pieces of bone and mold |
|
16 |
Child |
mold and parts of box |
|
17 |
Child |
few bones, mold and nails |
|
18 |
Child |
pieces of skull and mold |
|
19 |
Child |
Found part of skull and few bones |
|
20 |
Child |
Found part of skull and other small bones |
|
21 |
Child |
Found mold and nails |
|
22 |
Child |
few bones and nails |
|
23 |
Elizabeth Purdy - August 16, 1810 (Child) |
skull and main part of skeleton and coffin practically complete |
|
24 |
Child |
mold and nails |
|
25 |
Silas Purdy - June 21, 1814. (Adult) * |
all of skeleton |
|
26 |
Adult |
main part of skeleton |
|
27 |
Elder Wm. Purdy - Pastor of Baptist Church of Palmyra. Died Mar.
19, 1824. Age 75 years. * |
all of skeleton |
|
28 |
Rachel P., wife of Wm. Purdy. Died Oct. 12, 1828. Age 75 years. |
all of skeleton |
|
29 |
Charick V., son of Rufus and Amanda Bennett. Died Aug. 12, 1844.
Age 22 yrs, 4 mos., 24 days |
all of skeleton |
|
30 |
Amanda, wife of Rufus Bennett. Died Mar. 22, 1843. Age 41 yrs,
10 mos., 18 days |
most of skeleton |
|
31 |
Rufus Bennett - Died Oct. 31, 1847 - Age 55 yrs., 10 mos., 15
days |
most of skeleton |
|
32 |
Adult (Name illegible) |
greater part of skeleton |
|
33 |
Elizabeth Purdy - April 5, 1811 |
skull and few large bones |
|
34 |
Child |
few bones |
|
35 |
Child |
few bones |
|
36 |
Child |
skull and few pieces of bone |
|
37 |
Child |
found few small bones |
|
38 |
M. Purdy - Died June 11, 1811 |
found skull and greater part of skeleton |
|
39 |
E. Purdy - Died April 24, 1817 |
found few bones and mold |
|
40 |
Adult (Name illegible) |
skull, part of vertebrae and mold |
|
41 |
Adult (Name illegible) |
skull and few bones |
|
42 |
Child |
few bones and mold |
|
43 |
Child |
mold and nails |
|
44 |
Child |
few bones and mold |
|
45 |
Adult |
few bones and mold |
|
46 |
Adult |
all of skeleton |
|
47 |
Adult |
all of skeletion |
|
48 |
Adult |
mold |
|
49 |
Child |
mold |
|
50 |
Child |
pieces of skull, mold and nails |
|
51 |
Child |
mold and nails |
|
52 |
Adult |
main part of skeleton |
|
53 |
Child |
few pieces of bones |
|
54 |
Infant |
mold |
* A memo from the Office of Veterans' grave registation
Wayne County court House, Honesdale
list
Silas Purdy and Elder W. Purdy as VeteransContributed to this site by Annie Palmer
____________________________________________________________________________
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