batavia cemetery association https://www.thebatavian.com/ en https://www.thebatavian.com/themes/barrio_batavian/images/thebatavian_logo.png batavia cemetery association https://www.thebatavian.com/ Local Matters © 2008-2023 The Batavian. All Rights Reserved. Fri, 19 Apr 2024 15:28:10 -0400 https://www.thebatavian.com/themes/barrio_batavian/images/thebatavian_logo.png Tue, 20 Feb 2024 08:05:00 -0500 Batavian's journey to trace roots leads to Italy, pauper's plot, enlightened sobriety https://www.thebatavian.com/jfbeck99272012/batavians-journey-to-trace-roots-leads-to-italy-paupers-plot-enlightened-sobriety
Jim Morasco and Sharon Burkel at Batavia Cemetery
Jim Morasco and Sharon Burkel stand in front of the pauper's plot at Batavia Cemetery on a sunny Monday on Harvester Avenue in Batavia. 
Photo by Joanne Beck

Although it’s fair to say the Rev. James “Jim” Morasco has been working on a genealogy project to trace various members on his dad’s side of the family for the last several years, it might be more accurate to say he’s been working to put the pieces of himself in order for more than three decades.

And, although he may not have planned it this way, the two have peacefully collided with his latest find: his grandmother Genevive and Uncle Nicholas, both who have been traced to the nondescript pauper’s plot on the Southside of Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue.  

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https://www.thebatavian.com/jfbeck99272012/batavians-journey-to-trace-roots-leads-to-italy-paupers-plot-enlightened-sobriety#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/jfbeck99272012/batavians-journey-to-trace-roots-leads-to-italy-paupers-plot-enlightened-sobriety Feb 20, 2024, 8:05am batavia cemetery association Batavian's journey to trace roots leads to Italy, pauper's plot, enlightened sobriety jfbeck_99_272012 <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="Jim Morasco and Sharon Burkel at Batavia Cemetery" class="image-style-large" height="735" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-02/jim-morasco-sharon-burkel.jpg?itok=e6xlAe7X" width="800"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>Jim Morasco and Sharon Burkel stand in front of the pauper's plot at Batavia Cemetery on a sunny Monday on Harvester Avenue in Batavia.&nbsp;</em><br><em>Photo by Joanne Beck</em></figcaption> </figure> <p>Although it’s fair to say the Rev. James “Jim” Morasco has been working on a genealogy project to trace various members on his dad’s side of the family for the last several years, it might be more accurate to say he’s been working to put the pieces of himself in order for more than three decades.</p><p>And, although he may not have planned it this way, the two have peacefully collided with his latest find: his grandmother Genevive and Uncle Nicholas, both who have been traced to the nondescript pauper’s plot on the Southside of Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue.&nbsp;<span>&nbsp;</span></p>
Halloween candlelight ghost walk October 21 https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/halloween-candlelight-ghost-walk-october-21/636513
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File Photo by Howard Owens

Press Release:

The Batavia Cemetery Association is excited to announce that the annual Halloween Candlelight Ghost Walk will be held on Saturday, October 21. Join us for some spooky fun on a ghost walk through the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue to meet the famous and infamous movers and shakers who not only shaped and influenced the City of Batavia, but the United States and the world.

The guided tour on candlelit paths will bring guests to hear men and women, who, for various reasons, held great power and exerted great influence in their day, were victims of tragic events, or both. Confederate Major Philemon Tracy, one of the few Confederate officers buried in the north; surveyor and land developer of western New York Joseph Ellicott, a man of great power and great flaws; and William Morgan, who disappeared and was allegedly murdered before he could reveal the secrets of the Masons, will tell their stories.

Listen to Utopian socialist Albert Brisbane; Mary Elizabeth Wood, the first librarian at the Richmond Memorial Library and founder of the first library school in China; and Dr. Martha Morgan, a compassionate doctor who spent most of her professional life working at the State Lunatic Hospital in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.  

Meet Civil War General John H. Martindale, and maltster and brewer Eli Fish. Shipping and railroad magnate Dean Richmond and his wife Mary will greet guests in their beautiful mausoleum on the last stop of the tour.

Tours begin at 7 p.m. and run every fifteen minutes until 8:45 p.m. Admission is $15. Reservations are required. Proceeds benefit the upkeep and restoration of the cemetery. For more information, or to make reservations, go to bataviacemetery.org.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/halloween-candlelight-ghost-walk-october-21/636513#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/halloween-candlelight-ghost-walk-october-21/636513 Sep 22, 2023, 12:12pm batavia cemetery association Halloween candlelight ghost walk October 21 Press Release <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div align-center"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="ghost-walk.jpeg-edit.jpeg" class="image-style-large" height="448" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2023-09/ghost-walk.jpeg-edit.jpeg?itok=tDGwpaI1" width="672"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>File Photo by Howard Owens</em></figcaption> </figure> <p>Press Release:</p><blockquote><p>The Batavia Cemetery Association is excited to announce that the annual Halloween Candlelight Ghost Walk will be held on Saturday, October 21. Join us for some spooky fun on a ghost walk through the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue to meet the famous and infamous movers</p></blockquote>
HLOM display marks 200th Anniversary of Batavia Cemetery Association https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/hlom-display-marks-200th-anniversary-of-batavia-cemetery-association/635697
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Ryan Duffy, Holland Land Office Museum director, and Sharon Burkel, president of the Batavia Cemetery Association at the HLOM display marking the association's 200th anniversary.
Photo by Howard Owens

"All the people who founded this community are buried in there. These people came from Connecticut, Massachusetts, in the late 1700s, early 1800s. They came in wagons, probably drawn by oxen and horses. I always ask people, would you do that? Would you leave your home in those areas and come this far, make your way through Indian Territory and everything else to establish a city?" -- Sharon Burkel, president of the Batavia Cemetery Association

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https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/hlom-display-marks-200th-anniversary-of-batavia-cemetery-association/635697#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-owens/hlom-display-marks-200th-anniversary-of-batavia-cemetery-association/635697 Jul 14, 2023, 9:03pm batavia cemetery association HLOM display marks 200th Anniversary of Batavia Cemetery Association Howard Owens <figure role="group" class="caption caption-div align-center"> <div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img alt="hlom batavia cemetery 2023" class="image-style-large" height="533" loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2023-07/hlom-batavia-cemetery-2023.jpg?itok=kFqkWkkI" width="800"> </div> </div> <figcaption><em>Ryan Duffy, Holland Land Office Museum director, and Sharon Burkel, president of the Batavia Cemetery Association at the HLOM display marking the association's 200th anniversary.</em><br><em>Photo by Howard Owens</em></figcaption> </figure> <p>"All the people who founded this community are buried in there. These people came from Connecticut, Massachusetts, in the late 1700s, early 1800s. They came in wagons, probably drawn by oxen and horses. I always ask people, would you do that? Would you leave your home in those areas and come this far, make your way through Indian Territory and everything else to establish a city?" -- <em>Sharon Burkel, president of the Batavia Cemetery Association</em></p>
Batavia Cemetery Association will be hosting "Tea & Spirits" at HLOM https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/batavia-cemetery-association-will-be-hosting-tea-spirits-at-hlom/635525 Press Release:

The Historic Batavia Cemetery Association will be hosting a series of three Victorian Teas throughout the summer at the Holland Land Office Museum. The teas will feature conversations with performers depicting famous residents of the cemetery. 

They will be taking place on Sundays at 2 p.m.; July 23, Aug. 20, and Sept. 17. 

July 23 will feature Joseph Ellicott, Rachel Ellicott Evans and William Morgan. August 20 will feature Dean & Mary Richmond and Eli Fish. September 17 will feature Albert Brisbane, General John Martindale, and Reverend John Yates. 

Savory bites and sweet treats will be served during chats with famous figures of local history. Tickets are $25 or $20 for HLOM members, and can be purchased by calling the Holland Land Office Museum at 585-343-4727. Tickets are limited. The event is a fundraiser for the Historic Batavia Cemetery.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/batavia-cemetery-association-will-be-hosting-tea-spirits-at-hlom/635525#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/batavia-cemetery-association-will-be-hosting-tea-spirits-at-hlom/635525 Jun 30, 2023, 5:36pm batavia cemetery association Batavia Cemetery Association will be hosting "Tea & Spirits" at HLOM Press Release <p>Press Release:</p><blockquote><p>The Historic Batavia Cemetery Association will be hosting a series of three Victorian Teas throughout the summer at the Holland Land Office Museum. The teas will feature conversations with performers depicting famous residents of the cemetery.&nbsp;</p><p>They will be taking place on Sundays at 2 p.m.; July 23</p></blockquote>
History of once-prominent black resident of Batavia coming to light with new research https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/history-of-once-prominent-black-resident-of-batavia-coming-to-light-with-new-research
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Article by Sharon Burkel
Batavia Cemetery Association

Many famous and influential citizens are buried in the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue, and their stories are familiar to many. The founding families of Batavia: the Ellicotts, the Richmonds, the Brisbanes, and the Carys; the Confederate soldier Philemon Tracy and his uncle, Judge Phineas Tracy, who brought Philemon’s body back over enemy lines for burial; and the infamous William Morgan, the man who threatened to reveal Masonic secrets, was kidnapped and disappeared. But every stone in a cemetery represents the story of a person who played a part not only in the lives of their friends and family but also in building the fabric of the community. Sometimes their stories get lost in time, especially when there is no gravestone.

Such is the case of Watson Bullock, a Black entrepreneur, businessman, and activist who lived in LeRoy and Batavia in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Russell Nephew, a Batavia resident who collects Batavia artifacts, contacted the Batavia Cemetery Association after he received a request from Glenn Hinson, Associate Professor of Folklore and Anthropology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Professor Hinson is doing research on the Bullock family and inquired if Watson is buried in the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue.  The cemetery’s old records show that Watson, his wife Martha, and four of his children rest in the northeast corner of the cemetery. Mr. Nephew and this writer walked the cemetery to find their graves, and discovered they are all unmarked.

Ruth McAvoy writes in her book The History of Batavia, “One family that contributed to the local area was that of the Watson Bullocks who for many years lived at 113 Liberty Street. The Bullocks moved to Batavia from LeRoy about 1880. For years, the Bullocks ran a drycleaning establishment and manufactured and sold bluing (which adds a trace amount of blue dye to white fabric during laundering to improve its appearance) in bottles that still turn up in local dumps. A manuscript history of the Free Methodist Church identifies Watson Bullock as the man who preserved the $50 from the sale by the church of the Holland Land Office and made sure that the money would be available when the Methodist Society was ready to purchase a new place of worship. He was also one of the founders of the Emancipation Celebration Society.”

Mr. Bullock was born in North Carolina sometime in 1844 and moved to LeRoy after the Civil War with his family, who were reported to be ex-slaves.  In 1871, a newspaper ad in The LeRoy Gazette shows he was cleaning and repairing clothes in LeRoy, which continued until he married the widow, Martha Butler, on May 6, 1878. She was a hairdresser in LeRoy. Business ads in The Daily Morning News indicate that in October 1878, they moved to Batavia to establish a dyeing and cleaning business at 104 Main Street; that in April 1880 they moved their home and business to the southwest corner of East Main and Cemetery Streets (now Harvester Avenue), and again in June 1880 to 6 State Street. The Batavia Daily News ads show they moved in July 1881 to 25 Jackson Street, in 1889 to 30 Liberty Street, in 1891 to 9 South Liberty Street, and in 1902 to 113 South Liberty Street, where they remained until Watson’s death on March 21, 1918. During these years the Watsons manufactured and sold liquid bluing, five different colors of ink for dyeing, created the “London Carpet Renovator” to clean carpets in place, repaired and cleaned clothes, and sold second-hand household items and clothes, books, notions, and patent medicines.

The Bullocks’ life was not easy. Professor Hinson relates that they lost seven of their eight children by 1890 and wrote, “That’s a long hard list…and with none living more than ten years.” Three of the children buried in the Batavia Cemetery died within four months in 1890 of consumption (pulmonary tuberculosis): Hattie, on July 19th, aged 1 year, 3 months; Edmund, on September 2nd, aged 6 years; and Watson, on November 15th, aged 1 year, 7 months. The fourth child, Eva Estelle, died on August 4, 1871, aged 9 years.

An article by Alice Zillman Chapin in The Batavia Daily News dated Saturday, April 8, 1961, entitled “There is Civil War Issue Behind Church’s Centennial,” tells that a “mystery book,” which had been discovered in the attic of the Cattaraugus Free Methodist parsonage in 1959, revealed that the Batavia Free Methodist congregation in Batavia had been founded in April of 1861, not 1878 as they had previously thought. The Free Methodists were staunch abolitionists and had broken with the Methodist Episcopal Church throughout the United States.

Chapin writes, “It was an ex-slave from North Carolina, Watson Bullock, who was responsible for keeping the newborn Batavia Free Methodist Church on its feet. Under his leadership, meetings were held in two rooms of the house at the west corner of East Main and Harvester Avenue. Strangely enough, by 1880, the Holland Land Office entered the picture. The building was purchased by the Free Methodists from Ruth Bryan whose mother had conducted the Bryan Young Ladies’ Seminary there. Church meetings were held on one side of the building, which was, according to records, divided by a long hall. Apartments made up the other side.”

Chapin continues, “With finances somewhat shaky, the little band of Free Methodist pioneers sold their historical Land Office church to Kate and Edna Clapsaddle Lawrence…. With much foresight, the ex-slave, Watson Bullock, held the money from the Land Office sale in trust, feeling certain that somehow, someway, the Batavia group would be able once again to purchase their own church building. Church records show, interestingly enough, that there was some dispute as to how the funds should be spent, but Mr. Bullock staunchly guarded the money for four years. By 1893, with funds from the Bullock account, the half-completed property at Ellicott St. and Linwood Avenue was purchased. The Batavia Methodist Episcopal Church had abandoned plans for the building and put the unfinished structure up for sale. Originally the Free Methodists planned it as a mission to the foreign-born of the city but it later became their church home.”

Although they suffered unimaginable grief in the loss of their children, Watson and Martha were always concerned about their community and fellow man and faithful to their church. Articles in The Daily News reported they collected clothing for the “…suffering colored refugees of Southern Kansas…” after a nine-month drought in 1880-81, allowed their business at 9 South Liberty Street to be used as a District 6 polling place in 1891, and held Free Methodist prayer and home missionary society meetings at their different homes. In 1900, Watson was sworn in as an officer (Orderly) of the Salvation Army. He had a float in the 4th of July parade in 1907 and was elected as an alternate delegate for District No. 5 to the Prohibition County Convention in 1910. He donated 10% of his sales in December 1914 to the Belgian Relief Fund as the German-occupied country was suffering great food shortages in World War I. In 1917, Watson was elected chairman of the new Emancipation Celebration Society.

The Daily News reported Watson’s death on March 21, 1918:

Well-Known Resident Died Following Stroke of Apoplexy

“Watson Bullock died about 6 o’clock this morning at his home, Number 113 South Liberty Street. He had been confined to his bed about ten days and it was believed that he suffered a stroke of apoplexy (cerebral hemorrhage).

Mr. Bullock was 73 years old and had resided in Batavia about 50 years, being well-known and respected. He was a trustee of the Free Methodist Church of Ellicott Street and was an active supporter of the Salvation Army. For several years he manufactured and sold blueing in wholesale and retail quantities and in recent years he had conducted a secondhand store. Besides his wife he is survived by son, John Bullock, a daughter, Miss Adeline Bullock, both of whom reside at home, and a stepson, George Butler of Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania.

Mr. Bullock came north with his parents from North Carolina, where the family was in slavery before the Civil War. The family lived in Leroy for a short time, before coming to Batavia.”

Alice Chapin also wrote about Bullock’s passing, “Watson Bullock was widely loved and respected by townspeople of all faiths in Batavia. Readings in the ‘mystery’ record book tell that in 1918, when he died, the Free Methodist Church that he so dearly loved, was crowded with prominent people who came to honor him for his faithfulness to his God, his church and his community.”

On April 6, 1918, The Daily News reported the value of Watson’s estate as “…$4,650, of which $450 is in personal property.” ($85,650 today!) It was left to Martha as executrix and would go to the children at her death. Sadly, Martha Bullock died May 2, 1936, at the age of 89 at the Genesee County Poor Farm in Bethany.

The Free Methodists sold their building on Ellicott Street to Mt. Zion Baptist Church and built a new church on Bank Street in 1968, which is now Arbor House, part of Northgate Free Methodist Church. When the new church was dedicated, Dorothy Parker wrote in The Daily News on April 27, 1968, that according to a history written by longtime parishioner Mrs. Erwin Worthington, “Watson Bullock, an ex-slave who had operated a large dry cleaning business in Le Roy and Thomas Hill, body servant to a Confederate officer, were members of this early church.”  She also recounts that the Holland Land Office building was sold for $500, not $50 as McEvoy said and that the money was ‘…banked by Watson Bullock, rather than returned to the church conference as was customary. Mr. Bullock was determined to re-activate the church in Batavia.’”

For many years, it was thought that the only person of color buried in the Historic Batavia Cemetery was a woman named Addy. The inscription on her stone reads, “For 46 years the faithful colored servant of the Reverend Lucius Smith and family. Died January 28, 1857, aged 50 years.”

The Association thanks Professor Hinson and Russell Nephew for bringing to light the story of the Bullock family and their contributions to the Batavia community. Every soul in a cemetery has a story, and they all deserve to be remembered.

Previously: In 1921, Matthew Bullock fled to Batavia on his way to Canada to escape lynching

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https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/history-of-once-prominent-black-resident-of-batavia-coming-to-light-with-new-research#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/press-release/history-of-once-prominent-black-resident-of-batavia-coming-to-light-with-new-research Feb 24, 2022, 6:19pm batavia cemetery association History of once-prominent black resident of Batavia coming to light with new research Press Release <p><div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/users/60/2022-02/cropcarpet_renovator_may_1_1897.jpg?itok=97RgyLzX" width="415" height="394" alt="cropcarpet_renovator_may_1_1897.jpg" class="image-style-large"> </div> </div> </p> <p><em>Article by Sharon Burkel<br> Batavia Cemetery&nbsp;Association</em></p> <p>Many famous and influential citizens are buried in the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue, and their stories are familiar to many. The founding families of Batavia: the Ellicotts, the Richmonds, the Brisbanes, and the Carys; the Confederate soldier Philemon Tracy and his uncle</p>
Photos: 2018 Ghost Walk https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-b-owens/photos-2018-ghost-walk/523027
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Tracy Ford reprised his role as the Rev. John Henry Yates during the Batavia Cemetary Association's annual Ghost Walk, which gives guests an opportunity to be treated to a lively lesson on Batavia's history.

This year's addition included Gregory Hallock, director of GO ART!, as Eli Fish, the former local brewer who has come to life again, so to speak, in the brewery and restaurant now occupying the former Newberry's building downtown.

Diana Buckman, also pictured below, played Nannie Hunt, whose sons Thomas and Joseph served in the Civil War, with Joseph dying in battle in 1862. She read a letter from Hunt's daughter Martha about Joseph's death.

Once again, the event was a sellout.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-b-owens/photos-2018-ghost-walk/523027#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-b-owens/photos-2018-ghost-walk/523027 Oct 21, 2018, 11:30pm batavia cemetery association Photos: 2018 Ghost Walk Howard Owens <p><div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/users/60/2018-10/ghostwalk2018.jpg?itok=mlGYXSq5" width="460" height="307" alt="ghostwalk2018.jpg" class="image-style-large"> </div> </div> </p> <p>Tracy Ford reprised his role as the&nbsp;Rev.&nbsp;John Henry&nbsp;Yates during the Batavia Cemetary Association's annual Ghost Walk, which gives guests an opportunity to be treated to a lively lesson on Batavia's history.</p> <p>This year's addition included Gregory Hallock, director of GO ART!, as Eli Fish, the former local brewer who has</p>
Reserve your spot for a candlelight guided ghost walk in Batavia Cemetery on Oct. 20 https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/reserve-your-spot-for-a-candlelight-guided-ghost-walk-in-batavia-cemetery-on-oct-20 Press release:

Join us for some spooky fun on Saturday, Oct. 20th, when the Batavia Cemetery Association will host a candlelight guided ghost walk through the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue in Batavia.

The tours will feature the famous and infamous movers and shakers who shaped and influenced the City of Batavia.

The guided tour will bring guests to meet men and women of Batavia, who, for various reasons, held great power and exerted great influence in their day, were victims of tragic events, or both: Philemon Tracy, one of the few Confederate officers buried in the North; Ruth the unknown victim of a horrendous murder; Joseph Ellicott, a man of great power and great flaws; and William Morgan, the man who disappeared and was allegedly murdered before he could reveal the secrets of the Masons. These are some of the ghosts who will tell their stories on the tour.

Also visiting will be: Rev. John H. Yates, poet, preacher, philanthropist, journalist and author of nationally known hymns; Civil War veteran General John H. Martindale, who was Military Governor of the District of Columbia in 1865; and Dean and Mary Richmond, who greatly influenced civic life in Batavia in the 1800s, will meet with guests in their mausoleum on the last stop of the tour.

Dean Richmond made a great fortune in Great Lakes shipping and was the second president of the New York Central Railroad. Mary Richmond vastly expanded her husband’s fortune after his death and sat on the boards of many businesses and civic organizations. 

Tours begin at 7 p.m. and run every 15 minutes until 8:30 p.m. Admission is $10 and includes refreshments. Reservations are required.

Proceeds benefit the upkeep and restoration of the cemetery. For more information, or to make reservations, contact 343-3220.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/reserve-your-spot-for-a-candlelight-guided-ghost-walk-in-batavia-cemetery-on-oct-20#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/reserve-your-spot-for-a-candlelight-guided-ghost-walk-in-batavia-cemetery-on-oct-20 Sep 9, 2018, 1:37pm batavia cemetery association Reserve your spot for a candlelight guided ghost walk in Batavia Cemetery on Oct. 20 Billie Owens <p><em>Press release:</em></p> <p>Join us for some spooky fun on&nbsp;Saturday, Oct. 20th, when the Batavia Cemetery Association will host a candlelight guided ghost walk through the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue in Batavia.</p> <p>The tours will feature the famous and infamous movers and shakers who shaped and influenced the City</p>
Make your reservations for historic Batavia Cemetery Association's Halloween Candlelight Ghost Walk https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/make-your-reservations-for-historic-batavia-cemetery-associations-halloween-candlelight Press release:

Join us for some spooky fun on Saturday, Oct. 21st, when the Batavia Cemetery Association will host a candlelight guided ghost walk through the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue in Batavia.

The tours will feature the famous and infamous movers and shakers who shaped and influenced the City of Batavia. The guided tour will bring guests to meet men and women of Batavia, who, for various reasons, held great power and exerted great influence in their day, were victims of tragic events, or both.

  • Philemon Tracy, one of the few Confederate officers buried in the north;
  • Ruth the unknown victim of a horrendous murder;
  • Joseph Ellicott, a man of great power and great flaws; and
  • William Morgan, the man who disappeared and was allegedly murdered before he could reveal the secrets of the Masons, are some of the ghosts who will tell their stories on the tour;
  • Also visiting will be Rev. John H. Yates, poet, preacher, philanthropist, journalist and author of nationally known hymns;
  • Civil War veteran General John H. Martindale, who was Military Governor of the District of Columbia in 1865;
  • Dean and Mary Richmond, who greatly influenced civic life in Batavia in the 1800s, will meet with guests in their mausoleum on the last stop of the tour. Dean Richmond made a great fortune in Great Lakes shipping and was the second president of the New York Central Railroad. Mary Richmond vastly expanded her husband’s fortune after his death and sat on the boards of many businesses and civic organizations.

Tours begin at 7 p.m. and run every 15 minutes until 8:30 p.m. Admission is $10 and includes refreshments. Reservations are strongly recommended.

Some tickets may be available at the gate the evening of the event at Historic Batavia Cemetery, Harvester Avenue, Batavia. Proceeds benefit the upkeep and restoration of the cemetery.

For more information, or to make reservations, contact 343-3220.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/make-your-reservations-for-historic-batavia-cemetery-associations-halloween-candlelight#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/make-your-reservations-for-historic-batavia-cemetery-associations-halloween-candlelight Sep 6, 2017, 6:16pm batavia cemetery association Make your reservations for historic Batavia Cemetery Association's Halloween Candlelight Ghost Walk Billie Owens <p><em>Press release:</em></p> <p>Join us for some spooky fun on&nbsp;<strong>Saturday, Oct. 21st</strong>, when the Batavia Cemetery Association will host a <strong>candlelight guided ghost walk through the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue in Batavia</strong>.</p> <p>The tours will feature the famous and infamous movers and shakers who shaped and</p>
Photos: Batavia Cemetery Association hosts annual ghost walk https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-b-owens/photos-batavia-cemetery-association-hosts-annual-ghost-walk/181150
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Timothy Bucknam stands in for Philemon Tracy, the only Confederate officer lain to rest north of the Mason-Dixon line, who is buried in the Batavia Cemetery.

Bucknam provided visitors to the cemetery last night with information on Tracy's life during the Batavia Cemetery Association's annual ghost walk.

Also pictured below are Tracy Ford as poet Rev. John Henry Yates and Patrick Weissend as Joseph Ellicott.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-b-owens/photos-batavia-cemetery-association-hosts-annual-ghost-walk/181150#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/howard-b-owens/photos-batavia-cemetery-association-hosts-annual-ghost-walk/181150 Oct 23, 2016, 11:50am batavia cemetery association Photos: Batavia Cemetery Association hosts annual ghost walk Howard Owens <p><div> <div class="field field--name-field-media-image field--type-image field--label-hidden field__item"> <img loading="lazy" src="https://www.thebatavian.com/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/users/60/2016-10/harvestercemwalkoct222016.jpg?itok=RiYZoACZ" width="460" height="307" alt="harvestercemwalkoct222016.jpg" class="image-style-large"> </div> </div> </p> <p>Timothy Bucknam stands in for&nbsp;Philemon Tracy, the only Confederate officer lain to rest north of the Mason-Dixon line, who is buried in the Batavia Cemetery.</p> <p>Bucknam provided visitors to the cemetery last night with information on Tracy's life&nbsp;during the Batavia Cemetery Association's annual ghost walk.</p> <p>Also pictured below are Tracy</p>
Reminder: Batavia Cemetery Association to hold Victorian Home Tour May 15 https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/reminder-batavia-cemetery-association-to-hold-victorian-home-tour-may-15/137970 Press release:

The Batavia Cemetery Association will hold a Victorian Home Tour from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sunday, May 15th. The interior home tour will feature some of Batavia's finest examples of Victorian architecture.

The tour starts at the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue at 12:30 p.m.

Tickets are $25 and may be purchased online at bataviacemetery.com, in person (after April 16th) at Pollyanna & Dot at the Hidden Door, 202 E. Main St., Batavia, or by calling (585) 343-0248. Any remaining tickets may be purchased at the cemetery the day of the tour, however advance purchase is recommended as a limited number will be sold.

No children under the age of 12, please.

All proceeds benefit the upkeep and restoration of the Historic Batavia Cemetery, which was founded in 1823 and was listed on the State and National Registers of Historic Places in 2002.

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https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/reminder-batavia-cemetery-association-to-hold-victorian-home-tour-may-15/137970#comments https://www.thebatavian.com/billie-owens/reminder-batavia-cemetery-association-to-hold-victorian-home-tour-may-15/137970 May 4, 2016, 3:38pm batavia cemetery association Reminder: Batavia Cemetery Association to hold Victorian Home Tour May 15 Billie Owens <p><em>Press release:</em></p> <p>The Batavia Cemetery Association will hold a&nbsp;<strong>Victorian Home Tour from 1 to 5 p.m. on&nbsp;Sunday, May 15th</strong>.&nbsp;The interior home tour will feature some of Batavia's finest examples of Victorian&nbsp;architecture.</p> <p>The tour starts at the Historic Batavia Cemetery on Harvester Avenue at&nbsp;12:30 p.m.</p> <p>Tickets are $25 and</p>