Person Sheet


Name Carmon (Colmon) Smith Barto(w)13, Page 300, "Carmon (or Colmon) Smith, of Port hefferson, L.I., b. Aug. 16, 1825, , has William, Mary, Sarah, Benjamin, Catharine and Libbie.", Charles not listed, but see census.,13, Page 206, son of Elkanah, see his entry., B630, M
Birth Date 26 Apr 1825105,106
Birth Place Brooklyn, Kings County, New York
Residence Date 2 Jun 1860106 Age: 35
Residence Place Smithtown, Suffolk County, New York
Residence Date 29 Jun 1870105 Age: 45
Residence Place Brookhaven, Suffolk County, New York
Death Date bef 12 Sep 1911 Age: 86
Father Elkanah Barto, M (1794-)
Mother Ruth Wood, F
Spouses
1 Sarah E. ?106, city of Smithtown, page (5), line 9, 31 34 Carman S Barto 36 M Farmer 300 born New York, Sarah E. "" 37 F born New York, E000, F
Death Date bef 1870105
Residence Date 1860106
Residence Place Smithtown, Suffolk County, New York
Children Charles Henry, M (1858-1921)
Notes for Carmon (Colmon) Smith Barto(w)
Mon, 9 Nov 1998 11:09:14 EST
CaroleeRI@aol.com

Dear Charles,

I don't know if you are related to the Bartows of "mansion" fame, but
if not, you should certainly be able to find record of the family in
the collections of the New York Genealogical and Biographical
Society. Their collections are indexed and often found in good
libraries - I have no doubt that some facility
in Indianapolis holds them.

Here's what I can tell you about the Bartow-Pell Family Burial
Ground:

It was a private cemetery. It has 8 gravestones dating from 1748 to
1790. The cemetery is located on Shore Road, north of Split Rock
Road, in Pelham Bay Park, Bronx.

Thomas Pell, an Englishman, purchased more the 9,000 acres from the
Siwanoy Indians in 1654. The mansion, third on the site, was built
by Pell's descendants, Robert and Marie (Lorillard) Bartow. New York
City purchased the house and grounds in 1888 as part of a program to
develop parks in the city.
The house stood vacant until 1915, when the International Garden Club
made its headquarters there, restored the house and grounds, and
planted gardens.

David Pell Secor, in a letter to the New York Tribune in 1903, wrote
that there were more headstones in the graveyard when he visited the
grounds in the1860s. At that time, many of the graves had been
ploughed up, and their markers had been placed against a stone wall
near the burial ground. The
Department of Parks reported that "a member of the Garden Club siad
that the site has no bidies, the gravestones were scattered
throughout the area and consolidated into one site." Members of the
Pell family are also buried on City Island, in Green-Wood Cemetery,
and in New Rochelle, New York.

I contacted the Garden Club about this cemetery some time ago, and
they made it very clear that they don't know anything about it.

One resource is the DAR, New York State Cemetery, Church, and Town
Records.

Volume 70. 1935. Page 1. (Gravestone Inscriptions).

By the way, Steve and I would love to meet you! We'll let you know
what our plans are as soon as we make them.

Best wishes, Carolee
________________
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