WESTCOTT Harold E.

WESTCOTT Harold E.

Male 1875 - 1904  (29 years)

 

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Harold Westcott gravestone


HAROLD WESTCOTT

Status: Located
Plot:
Sect 13 plot 55

Owner of originalFind A Grave Memorial #76573754
Date15 Sep 2011
PlaceOakwood AKA Morningside Cemetery; Syracuse, NY
Latitude43.03140
Longitude-76.13483
File nameWESTCOTT Harold.jpg
File Size570.95k
Dimensions1300 x 975
Linked toWESTCOTT Harold E. (Burial)

Oakwood AKA Morningside Cemetery, Syracuse, Onondaga, New York, USA

Notes: 940 Comstock Avenue
Syracuse
Onondaga County
New York USA
Postal Code: 13210

Oakwood Cemeteries Inc.
Phone: (315) 475-2194
Fax: (315) 475-8256

Oakwood cemetery had been designed by the landscaping architect Howard Daniels and opened with the first burial in November 1859. The original 92 acre cemetery was about 2/3 forest and originally only about 32 acres were used for burials. Syracuse mayor Elias Warner Leavenworth was one of the driving forces behind the establishment of Oakwood cemetery. The initial land purchase took place in 1857 and 1858. 72.29 acres were bought from Henry Raynor for $15,000 and 20 acres were purchased for $9,500 from Charles A. Baker. During the planning stages agreements were made to move an existing road which would have passed through the cemetery. The course of the Jamesville Plank Road had to be changed and its toll gate moved. Prior to the development, the road ran from Renwick Avenue southwest through the proposed cemetery land and crossed East Colvin Street. The toll gate was at the intersection of that road and Jamesville Avenue. The present Jamesville Avenue was the former Jamesville Plank Road. Also, rights of way across lands owned by Charles Baker and Dr. David Colvin had to be obtained.
The first sexton was George Gardner, who lived in a cottage in the cemetery. His daughter, Lillian Oakwood Gardner, named for the cemetery, was the first birth there and was interred ten months later. J. Lyman Silsbee designed the chapel and receiving vault which opened Nov 1880 and two years later James J. Belden gave a greenhouse, office building and arch under the railroad tracks. The greenhouse was used until World War II, and that archway was closed permanently in 1964 when the state took some land to create Route 81. Eight monuments were included on the Smithsonian Preservation of Cultural Property list in 1993.

To its east another cemetery was founded in 1899, named Morningside Cemetery, which had its first burial in 1900. By 1976 Oakwood Cemetery and Morningside Cemetery have formally consolidated. Oakwood had operated Morningside since 1962. The name "Morningside" is still being used locally or can be found on local maps. Oakwood's sections starting with letters (Sec. B, Sec. C, and so on) show what was originally the Morningside cemetery.

Oakwood AKA Morningside Cemetery


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