An early settler of that area, James Gibbons, sold a parcel of land to the United States government for the creation of the Arsenal in 1813; to support the fight against the British during the War of 1812. As time passed the Arsenal grew in size and as they needed more land the Arsenal acquired the land on which the "old burying grounds" were located.
The grave stones and bodies were removed and re-buried in section 100 of the Albany Rural Cemetery. Approximately 300 bodies were re-interned around 1918. The majority of the stones were laid flat on the ground with only a handful being re-installed upright. Over the years the ground has reclaimed just about all of the stones that were laid flat. They have sunk into the ground and have been covered with dirt, grass, and leaves over the years.
About twenty years ago my wife and I took it upon ourselves to locate the grave site of one of my ancestors, Samuel Hitchcock, who was originally buried in the Arsenal Burying Grounds. All of the stones were buried over with grass but with using a plot map from the cemetery we were able to pull the sod up and locate the grave stones.
Site of Samuel & Mary Hitchcock's gravestones |
I recently went back to Albany Rural Cemetery with a plan to reclaim my ancestor's grave stone. After twenty years, the ground again had covered the grave stones. Twenty years ago is quite a while and my memory did not let me recall how deep the grave stones had actually sunk into the earth. The lower part of them were at least six to seven inches deep.
Initial excavation of grave stones |
It would be unsafe for the stones and for anyone walking over them in the condition that were. Unlevel and with a huge divot missing from the ground. Therefore I decided to completely remove the stones and place the earth which was on top of them underneath them. I also brought out some leveling sand to make sure that the were level. The stones were placed back into the ground so that they were about 3/4" of an inch below the grade level.
Cleaned, raised, and leveled grave stones |
As time passes, they will again be covered over with dirt but not to the extent that they were previously. The stones were cleaned with D/2 cleaning solution and rinsed with water. The stones look almost brand new considering they are from the late 1820s & early 1830s.
Samuel & Mary Hitchcock |
I wondered if there were a lot of sunken stones there. Only a few stones are noted on Albany Rural's map for the section, which I thought couldn't be right. See https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B7Mt-S77wZKfZXl4ZkxXMDZlUW8/edit?usp=sharing for more info about the Gibbonsville Cemetery.
ReplyDeleteI believe that there are many stones in that section of the cemetery. They have simply sunk into the ground over the years. The stones that I have found are almost side by side with very little space in between. If you carefully used some sort of probe you will be able to feel the stones below the surface. At the same time, no one wants to damage the stones also. The rows of graves are clearly seen by the settling of the soil.
ReplyDeleteYour link is an excellent resource regarding the actions leading up to the sale of the Gibbonsville Cemetery land!
A well written and very informative article.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure your ancestors are "looking up" and very grateful to see some light.
I was in this section of the Cemetery yesterday afternoon and the stones you uncovered look terrific.
ReplyDeleteThanks Paula
DeleteWould be nice to see that whole section cleaned up sometime, next year maybe. If you could secure the necessary permissions, I'd be happy to help. I'd also love to see the Watervliet upper burying grounds be reclaimed.
ReplyDelete