Pomfret Manor Cemetery
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Pomfret Manor Cemetery is a cemetery located in
Sunbury, Pennsylvania Sunbury ( ) is a city and the county seat of Northumberland County in Pennsylvania, United States. Located in the Susquehanna Valley, Sunbury is positioned on the east bank of the Susquehanna River. Sunbury's roots stretch back to the early ...
. Former members of the
United States Congress The United States Congress is the legislature, legislative branch of the federal government of the United States. It is a Bicameralism, bicameral legislature, including a Lower house, lower body, the United States House of Representatives, ...
and U.S.
Medal of Honor The Medal of Honor (MOH) is the United States Armed Forces' highest Awards and decorations of the United States Armed Forces, military decoration and is awarded to recognize American United States Army, soldiers, United States Navy, sailors, Un ...
winners are among the notable interments here.


History

Incorporated as the Mt. Pleasant Cemetery Company on August 4, 1870, this cemetery was officially organized on August 22 of that same year. At that time, the following individuals were appointed as the cemetery's first executive officers: Alexander Jordan, president; J. A. Cake, treasurer; and Lloyd T. Rohrbach, secretary. Other members of the organization's first board of directors were: Rev. George J. Brensinger, Rev. Gideon J. Burton, Rev. W. W. Evans, Rev. George W. Hemperley, Rev. Samuel K. Milliken, and William M. Rockefeller. On June 9, 1873, the cemetery's name was officially changed to Pomfret Manor Cemetery. Nearly two decades later, historian Charles Herbert Bell provided these further details:
The grounds comprise twenty acres, situated within the borough limits of East Sunbury at a considerable elevation above the river. Five acres were improved and adapted to cemetery purposes, and, although some interments were made, the project was for some years practically abandoned. A reorganization of the company was effected August 1, 1890 with the following officers: president, George B. Reimensnyder; secretary and treasurer, W. H. Druckemiller; directors: Rev. George Parson, George B. Reimensnyder, J. H. Alleman, Rev. W. E. Parson, and Ira Shipman. Under the new management the cemetery promises to become one of the most attractive places of interment in the county.
In April 1915, the cemetery was threatened briefly by the spread of the Shade Mountain Fire, a large forest fire which destroyed hundreds of acres of second-growth timber in Northumberland County and threatened Snyder County's Shade Mountain
huckleberry Huckleberry is a name used in North America for several plants in the family Ericaceae, in two closely related genera: ''Vaccinium'' and ''Gaylussacia''. Nomenclature The name 'huckleberry' is a North American variation of the English dialectal ...
district. On June 20, 1918, the Sunbury Volunteer Firemen's Association continued its annual tradition of honoring deceased fireman with a parade through Sunbury which stopped at the Pomfret Manor Cemetery, where the marchers decorated the graves of firemen interred there. Rev. Charles K. Gibson then addressed the crowd and marchers before they moved on for another ceremony at Susquehanna Park.


Notable interments

* Charles C. Bowen, Northumberland County Representative to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1905)Charles C. Bowen
(profile). Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania House of Representatives, retrieved online August 22, 2018. * Maj. Gen. Charles M. Clement, first recipient of the U.S. Army's Spanish War Service and
Mexican Border Service The Mexican Border Service Medal was a U.S. service medal established by an Act of Congress on July 9, 1918. It was awarded for service on the border between May 9, 1916 and March 24, 1917. Additionally, recipients included those who performed ...
medals, and commander of the Pennsylvania National Guard's 28th Infantry Division * Birdie Cree, Major League Baseball outfielder * Herbert Wesley Cummings, U.S. Congressman (68th session) * Bvt. Lt. Col. Thomas W. Hoffman, U.S. Medal of Honor recipient * Isaac Clinton Kline, U.S. Congressman (67th session) * John Black Packer, Pennsylvania deputy attorney general (1845–1847), member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1850–1851), and U.S. Congressman (42nd and 43rd sessions) * Simon Peter Wolverton, Pennsylvania senator (1878, 1880 and 1884) and U.S. Congressman (52nd and 53rd sessions)


References

{{reflist


External links


Political Graveyard
Cemeteries in Pennsylvania