Individual Details
Alexander Berry Jr.
(1784 - 1855)
Events
Families
Spouse | Hannah Drown (1812 - 1849) |
Child | Aylmer M. Berry (1831 - 1915) |
Child | Tamson Berry (1834 - 1913) |
Child | Lovina Berry (1835 - 1913) |
Child | Thomas C. Berry (1839 - 1908) |
Child | Stephen Berry (1839 - 1911) |
Child | Edmund Edwin Berry (1840 - 1862) |
Child | Joseph Berry (1845 - ) |
Spouse | Tamson Willey (1797 - 1830) |
Child | Jonathan Berry (1819 - 1889) |
Child | Darwin H. Berry (1824 - ) |
Child | Moses Berry (1826 - 1909) |
Child | Richard Berry (1827 - 1864) |
Spouse | Eliza Wiley ( - ) |
Child | Jeremiah Berry (1846 - 1920) |
Father | Alexander Berry (1760 - ) |
Mother | Johanna Gray (1762 - 1852) |
Sibling | Sarah Berry (1793 - ) |
Sibling | Samuel Berry Sr. (1785 - 1859) |
Sibling | Mary Berry (1794 - 1870) |
Sibling | Joanna Berry (1795 - 1877) |
Sibling | Thomas Berry (1787 - ) |
Sibling | John Berry (1799 - ) |
Sibling | Hannah Berry (1785 - ) |
Sibling | Solomon Berry (1780 - 1849) |
Sibling | Betsey Berry (1791 - ) |
Sibling | Jonathan Berry (1802 - ) |
Notes
Photo - Grave
This shaped stone was found a decade ago by the current (2015) property owner while roto-tilling his garden (which he moved a little northerly). An archeologist, he believes the stone was moved to this site and shaped to depict two graves.Beers' 1875 atlas shows Moses Berry living here, the cellar hole can still be seen at the east end of the pasture.
Research by Norma Berry-Williams, curator of the Sheffield Historical Society, has led her to believe these are the graves of Alexander II and Hannah (Drown) Berry, both of whom died around 1850.
Oddly, Walling's 1858 map does not show a road running past here.