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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
April 27, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Thursday, April 27, 2006
Burial Place of John Hunter (1778 - 1852) of Hunter's Island
John Hunter was born in 1778. He was a privileged and well-educated
young man who graduated from Columbia College. His father, Robert Hunter,
was a wealthy merchant engaged in the “auctioneering and commission
business” in New York City in the late 18th century.
As a young man, John joined his father’s firm and guided it to even
greater success. He became an American "merchant prince". On April 28,
1799, John Hunter married one of the nation’s wealthiest heiresses,
Elizabeth Desbrosses. Her estates reportedly included nearly two and a
half million acres of land including real estate in Delaware, Sullivan and
Green Counties as well as much real estate in New York City.
Some time between 1804 and 1812, John Hunter purchased an island known as
Appleby’s Island and two tiny nearby islands know as the Twin Islands
located off the shore of the Manor of Pelham. Appleby’s Island soon became
known as “Hunter’s Island”.
Hunter built a fabulous mansion on the peak of the hill near the center of
the island. He filled his mansion with the nation’s finest collections of
old master paintings, books and wine. He entertained President Martin Van
Buren in his home. He reportedly hosted the Marquis de Lafayette at his
lavish estate. Tradition says that Louis Philippe of France and his
brothers offered a fabulous sum to purchase the estate and that as early
as 1815 Napoleon’s brother, Joseph, (the King of Spain) also tried to buy
it.
John Hunter died in 1852. The whereabouts of his burial site have proven
stubbornly difficult to locate.
On April 1, while reviewing Pelham-related materials in the collections of
the New-York Historical Society Library I ran across a letter from the
owner of the Geo. T. Davis Funeral Home of New Rochelle responding to an
inquiry from Lockwood Barr, the author of a book on the history of Pelham
published in 1946, about the burial place of John Hunter.
The letter stated that although John Hunter died in 1852, his body was
among the first to be handled by the Grandfather of the owner of the
Funeral Home and was buried in Beechwoods Cemetery in New Rochelle in 1866
-- fourteen years after Hunter's death. The writer of the letter
speculated that John Hunter had been buried on Hunter's Island but, for
some reason, was moved from that location to Beechwoods Cemetery in 1866.
A reader of the Historic Pelham Blog who is also a dedicated local
historian has now provided me with copies of John Hunter's plot card from
the Beechwoods Cemetery in New Rochelle as well as a map showing the
location of his gravesite in that cemetery. The plot card seems to show
John Hunter as the "owner" of Lot No. 306 to 309 and that he died on
"Sept. 12, 1852" and was interred on "Sept. 14, 1852". According to the
plot card, however, Hunter was interred in Beechwoods Cemetery plot 1815
on August 25, 1866 apparently at a cost of "$300". The plot is located,
according to the map, near the convergence of Sylvan Avenue and Cypress
Avenue within Beechwoods Cemetery.
A part of the mystery has been solved. Of course, an intriguing mystery
remains -- why was John Hunter disinterred from his original burial spot
and reinterred in Beechwoods Cemetery? One hypothesis follows.
Under John Hunter's will, his grandson (also named John Hunter) could
choose to live on the Hunter Family's "Bayard Farm" on Throgs Neck when he
reached the age of majority. If he so chose, however, the will required
the sale of Hunter's Island so the proceeds could be shared among young
John Hunter and his sisters. Because the young John Hunter chose to live
on Bayard Farm, in 1866 Hunter’s Island was sold for $127,500 to Ambrose
Kingsland, the Mayor of New York City. This transfer of ownership from the
Hunter estate to Ambrose Kingsland seems approximately to coincide with
the date that John Hunter's body was reinterred -- 14 years after his
death -- in Beechwoods Cemetery, New Rochelle. This suggests, of course,
that John Hunter was originally buried on Hunter's Island upon his death
and moved from that location when Ambrose Kingsland bought the island.
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
Click here to see a
single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:47 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog
Posting for April 27, 2006.
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