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Pelham
Historical Cemeteries
During the first 75 years of Pelham’s existence, residents were usually
buried “on the farm”. Often the graves were unmarked or temporarily
marked with wooden crosses. All evidence of most of the early “on the
farm burial” places has disappeared.
Two
of the Family Burial grounds were more formal than the rest. One was
the Sherburne Burial Ground established in 1798 when James Sherburne,
who migrated to Pelham from Portsmouth New Hampshire with his family in
the winter of 1751, was buried between the Farmhouse and Sherburne
Road. By 1876 fifteen members of his family had been buried in the
front yard.
Early
in 1898, at the insistence of his wife, Jennie Kathleen Marshall,
Gardner Willie Sherburne sought approval to move his ancestors from the
private Sherburne Cemetery to the recently established (1893) Gibson
Addition of the Pelham Center Cemetery.
Permission was granted in a written document signed on August 1, 1898 by
Pelham Town Clerk Daniel P. Atwood. A photocopy of that document can be
found on page 244 of “Reflections, a Pictorial History of Pelham”. The
Sherburne gravestones were moved with the remains and can be seen today
in sharp contrast to the later stones that surround the Sherburne
gravesite at the Gibson Addition. It was the practice in the early
1800s to use thin slate gravestones. Thick granite gravestones were the
standard when the Sherburne ancestors moved to the Gibson and thick
granite stones surround the Sherburne gravesite.
The
only family cemetery that survives today is the Coburn-Lyon Cemetery on
Pulpit Rock Road in Pelham. It received its formal documentation in 1875
when Bradley F. Lyon and George D. Coburn recorded a deed which read in
part “Therefore in consideration of the love and affection we bear to
our kindred we hereby donate, give, grant, convey and confirm to the
lineal descendents of said William R. Lyon and Gilbert Coburn through
all succeeding generations forever, an equal right and privilege with
ourselves in said lot for all entombment or burial uses and for no other
use or purposes whatsoever except to ornament and improve the same in a
manner suitable for such use.”
The
Town of Pelham currently maintains five cemeteries, including the
private Coburn-Lyon. A non Pelham Polish Catholic Church and a non
Pelham Jewish Synagogue maintain cemeteries behind the Coburn Lyon
Cemetery on Pulpit Rock Road. No evidence has been found that either
cemetery was ever been used by a Pelham resident.
The
five cemeteries maintained by the Town of Pelham in which Pelham
residents have been routinely interred are:
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The Atwood Cemetery
on Atwood Road. - Pelham Tax Map Parcel 22-8-28
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The Pelham Center Cemetery
(including the Gibson, Hayes and Currier additions) with entrances
on Old Bridge Street North and Marsh Road. - Pelham Tax Map Parcel
29-7-126)
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The Coburn-Lyon Cemetery
of Pulpit Rock Road. - Pelham Tax Map Parcel 41-6-144.
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The Gumpus Cemetery
on Mammoth Road. - Pelham Tax Map Parcel 28-2-35.
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The North Pelham Cemetery
north of Keyes Hill Road. - Pelham Tax map Parcel 2-5-150.
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Atwood
Cemetery
Atwood Road |
Pelham Center
Cemetery
Old Bridge Street North |
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Coburn-Lyon
Cemetery
Pulpit Rock Road |
North Pelham
Cemetery
Castle Hill Road |
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Gumpus
Cemetery
Mammoth Road |
http://www.pelhamnhhistory.org/ |