Goodspeed Cemetery: Difference between revisions
Migratebot (talk | contribs) Created page with " '''Goodspeed Cemetery''' is located two miles southeast of Franklin Falls in the Town of St. Armand on Gladd Road (also known as John Simonds Road and Goodspeed Drive).{| <tbody>|-/n| ||'''Born'''||'''Died'''||'''Note:'''||'''Inscription:'''|/n|-/n| William Ralph Arnold|| 1870|| Mar. 21, 1886 Aged 16 Years|| Son of Norman T. & Ann Arnold|| There is an inscription on th..." |
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'''Goodspeed Cemetery''' is located two miles southeast of [[Franklin%20Falls|Franklin Falls]] in the [[Town%20of%20St.%20Armand|Town of St. Armand]] on [[Gladd%20Road|Gladd Road]] (also known as John Simonds Road and Goodspeed Drive).{| | '''Goodspeed Cemetery''' is located two miles southeast of [[Franklin%20Falls|Franklin Falls]] in the [[Town%20of%20St.%20Armand|Town of St. Armand]] on [[Gladd%20Road|Gladd Road]] (also known as John Simonds Road and Goodspeed Drive).{| | ||
<tbody>|- | <tbody>|-\n| ||'''Born'''||'''Died'''||'''Note:'''||'''Inscription:'''|\n|-\n| | ||
[[William%20Ralph%20Arnold|William Ralph Arnold]]|| | [[William%20Ralph%20Arnold|William Ralph Arnold]]|| | ||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
Son of Norman T. & Ann Arnold|| | Son of Norman T. & Ann Arnold|| | ||
There is an inscription on the side which is illegible due to erosion.| | There is an inscription on the side which is illegible due to erosion.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Alfred%20Currier|Alfred W. Currier]]|| | [[Alfred%20Currier|Alfred W. Currier]]|| | ||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
|| | || | ||
Alfred W. and Gertrude<br>Lie here in the land they held so dear<br>In them the trees rejoice,<br>And of them, animals have no fear.| | Alfred W. and Gertrude<br>Lie here in the land they held so dear<br>In them the trees rejoice,<br>And of them, animals have no fear.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Gertrude%20Currier|Gertrude Currier]]|| | [[Gertrude%20Currier|Gertrude Currier]]|| | ||
Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
|| | || | ||
| | |\n|-\n| | ||
[[Augustus%20Goodspeed|Augustus Goodspeed]]|| | [[Augustus%20Goodspeed|Augustus Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
A member of Co D 17 Regt.<br>Vermont Volunteers|| | A member of Co D 17 Regt.<br>Vermont Volunteers|| | ||
One by one earth's ties are broken<br>As we see our love decay<br>And the hopes so fondly cherished<br>Brighten but to pass away.| | One by one earth's ties are broken<br>As we see our love decay<br>And the hopes so fondly cherished<br>Brighten but to pass away.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Rebecca%20Goodspeed|Rebecca F. Goodspeed]]|| | [[Rebecca%20Goodspeed|Rebecca F. Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 52: | Line 52: | ||
Wife of Augustus Goodspeed,<br>Daughter of Wm. & Sophia Galusha|| | Wife of Augustus Goodspeed,<br>Daughter of Wm. & Sophia Galusha|| | ||
,| | ,|\n|-\n| | ||
Infant Goodspeed|| | Infant Goodspeed|| | ||
Line 62: | Line 62: | ||
Son of Augustus &<br>Rebecca F. Goodspeed|| | Son of Augustus &<br>Rebecca F. Goodspeed|| | ||
| | |\n|-\n| | ||
[[Elias%20Goodspeed|Elias Goodspeed]]|| | [[Elias%20Goodspeed|Elias Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 72: | Line 72: | ||
A [[War%20of%201812%20Veterans|veteran of the war of 1812]]|| | A [[War%20of%201812%20Veterans|veteran of the war of 1812]]|| | ||
Gone but not forgotten Our Father| | Gone but not forgotten Our Father|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Lucinda%20Goodspeed|Lucinda Goodspeed]]|| | [[Lucinda%20Goodspeed|Lucinda Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 82: | Line 82: | ||
Wife of Elias Goodspeed|| | Wife of Elias Goodspeed|| | ||
Thus much – and 'tis enough to know,<br>Saints are completely blest;<br>Have done with sin, and care, and woe<br>And with their Savoiur rest.| | Thus much – and 'tis enough to know,<br>Saints are completely blest;<br>Have done with sin, and care, and woe<br>And with their Savoiur rest.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Polly%20Goodspeed|Polly A. Goodspeed]]|| | [[Polly%20Goodspeed|Polly A. Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 92: | Line 92: | ||
Wife of Nathaniel Goodspeed<br>Our Mother|| | Wife of Nathaniel Goodspeed<br>Our Mother|| | ||
This grave so deep and cold,<br>Doth my dear wife's form enfold,<br>Her spirit far away hath flown,<br>And I am left on earth alone.| | This grave so deep and cold,<br>Doth my dear wife's form enfold,<br>Her spirit far away hath flown,<br>And I am left on earth alone.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Adelaid%20Goodspeed|Adelaid Goodspeed]] || | [[Adelaid%20Goodspeed|Adelaid Goodspeed]] || | ||
Line 102: | Line 102: | ||
Daughter of Nathaniel &<br>Polly A. Goodspeed || | Daughter of Nathaniel &<br>Polly A. Goodspeed || | ||
Dearest Sister, thou hast left us,<br>But tis God that hath bereft us,<br>He can all our sorrows heal.<br>Here thy loss we deeply feel| | Dearest Sister, thou hast left us,<br>But tis God that hath bereft us,<br>He can all our sorrows heal.<br>Here thy loss we deeply feel|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Herbert%20Goodspeed|Herbert Goodspeed]] || | [[Herbert%20Goodspeed|Herbert Goodspeed]] || | ||
Line 112: | Line 112: | ||
Son of Nathaniel &<br>Polly A. Goodspeed || | Son of Nathaniel &<br>Polly A. Goodspeed || | ||
Go sweet child thy savior calls thee,<br>From these scenes of pain and woe<br>All thy sufferings here are ended,<br>And thy work is done below.| | Go sweet child thy savior calls thee,<br>From these scenes of pain and woe<br>All thy sufferings here are ended,<br>And thy work is done below.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Mary%20Goodspeed|Mary Goodspeed]]|| | [[Mary%20Goodspeed|Mary Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 122: | Line 122: | ||
Dau. of Nathaniel &<br>Polly A. Goodspeed || | Dau. of Nathaniel &<br>Polly A. Goodspeed || | ||
Go home my friends, dry up your tears<br>I must lie here till Christ appears.| | Go home my friends, dry up your tears<br>I must lie here till Christ appears.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[William%20Goodspeed|William Goodspeed]]|| | [[William%20Goodspeed|William Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 132: | Line 132: | ||
Son of Nathaniel &<br>Polly Goodspeed|| | Son of Nathaniel &<br>Polly Goodspeed|| | ||
(NOTE: This stone is lying flat on the ground. It is quite eroded.)| | (NOTE: This stone is lying flat on the ground. It is quite eroded.)|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Nathaniel%20Goodspeed|Nathaniel Goodspeed]]|| | [[Nathaniel%20Goodspeed|Nathaniel Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 142: | Line 142: | ||
Our Father|| | Our Father|| | ||
He is gone, safe in the arms of Jesus<br>Safe in the promised land.| | He is gone, safe in the arms of Jesus<br>Safe in the promised land.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Nathaniel%20Goodspeed%20b.%201749|Nathaniel Goodspeed]]|| | [[Nathaniel%20Goodspeed%20b.%201749|Nathaniel Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 152: | Line 152: | ||
A Revolutionary Soldier|| | A Revolutionary Soldier|| | ||
May they rest in peace until the resurrection morn.| | May they rest in peace until the resurrection morn.|\n|-\n| | ||
[[Abigail%20Goodspeed|Abigail Goodspeed]]|| | [[Abigail%20Goodspeed|Abigail Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 162: | Line 162: | ||
His Wife|| | His Wife|| | ||
| | |\n|-\n| | ||
[[Roswell%20Goodspeed|Roswell Goodspeed]]|| | [[Roswell%20Goodspeed|Roswell Goodspeed]]|| | ||
Line 172: | Line 172: | ||
Uncle|| | Uncle|| | ||
Be ye therefore also ready, for in such an<br>hour as ye think not, the son of man cometh. | | Be ye therefore also ready, for in such an<br>hour as ye think not, the son of man cometh. |\n|-\n| | ||
Elenor A. Goodspeed|| | Elenor A. Goodspeed|| | ||
Line 182: | Line 182: | ||
Daughter of S. & M. Watson|| | Daughter of S. & M. Watson|| | ||
Little hearts forever stainless<br>Little hands as pure as they<br>Little feet by angels guided,<br>Never a forbidding way. | | Little hearts forever stainless<br>Little hands as pure as they<br>Little feet by angels guided,<br>Never a forbidding way. |\n|-\n| | ||
George S. Watson|| | George S. Watson|| | ||
Line 192: | Line 192: | ||
Son of S. & M. Watson|| | Son of S. & M. Watson|| | ||
They are going ever going,<br>Leaving many a lonley (sic) spot,<br>But tis Jesus who has called them<br>Suffer and forbid them not.| | They are going ever going,<br>Leaving many a lonley (sic) spot,<br>But tis Jesus who has called them<br>Suffer and forbid them not.|\n</tbody> | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 20:14, 22 December 2024
Goodspeed Cemetery is located two miles southeast of Franklin Falls in the Town of St. Armand on Gladd Road (also known as John Simonds Road and Goodspeed Drive).{|
<tbody>|-\n| ||Born||Died||Note:||Inscription:|\n|-\n|
1870||
Mar. 21, 1886 Aged 16 Years||
Son of Norman T. & Ann Arnold||
There is an inscription on the side which is illegible due to erosion.|\n|-\n|
1887||
1978||
||
Alfred W. and Gertrude
Lie here in the land they held so dear
In them the trees rejoice,
And of them, animals have no fear.|\n|-\n|
1886||
1971||
||
|\n|-\n|
Oct. 9, 1833||
Jan. 6, 1892||
A member of Co D 17 Regt.
Vermont Volunteers||
One by one earth's ties are broken
As we see our love decay
And the hopes so fondly cherished
Brighten but to pass away.|\n|-\n|
November, 1838||
Aug. 17, 1858 AE 19 Years
& 9 M'os||
Wife of Augustus Goodspeed,
Daughter of Wm. & Sophia Galusha||
,|\n|-\n|
Infant Goodspeed||
||
July 21, 1856||
Son of Augustus &
Rebecca F. Goodspeed||
|\n|-\n|
September 13, 1780||
April 9, 1870||
A veteran of the war of 1812||
Gone but not forgotten Our Father|\n|-\n|
||
May 5, 1854 AE 76 yrs.||
Wife of Elias Goodspeed||
Thus much – and 'tis enough to know,
Saints are completely blest;
Have done with sin, and care, and woe
And with their Savoiur rest.|\n|-\n|
||
May 30, 1865 AE 57 Y'rs.
3 Mo's. & 19 D's.||
Wife of Nathaniel Goodspeed
Our Mother||
This grave so deep and cold,
Doth my dear wife's form enfold,
Her spirit far away hath flown,
And I am left on earth alone.|\n|-\n|
||
Apr. 2, 1860 AE 11 y'rs.
1 m'o. & 3 ds||
Daughter of Nathaniel &
Polly A. Goodspeed ||
Dearest Sister, thou hast left us,
But tis God that hath bereft us,
He can all our sorrows heal.
Here thy loss we deeply feel|\n|-\n|
||
April 17, 1860 AE 7 y'rs.
5 m'os & 15 d's.||
Son of Nathaniel &
Polly A. Goodspeed ||
Go sweet child thy savior calls thee,
From these scenes of pain and woe
All thy sufferings here are ended,
And thy work is done below.|\n|-\n|
c. 1844||
Apr. 5, 1871 Aged 27 yrs.||
Dau. of Nathaniel &
Polly A. Goodspeed ||
Go home my friends, dry up your tears
I must lie here till Christ appears.|\n|-\n|
||
Aug. 17, 1864 AE [22] Y'rs.
7 M'os. & 18 Days||
Son of Nathaniel &
Polly Goodspeed||
(NOTE: This stone is lying flat on the ground. It is quite eroded.)|\n|-\n|
c. December 16, 1807||
Feb. 22, 1888 AE 81 Y'rs.
2 M's. & 6 Days||
Our Father||
He is gone, safe in the arms of Jesus
Safe in the promised land.|\n|-\n|
June 17, 1749||
Dec. 25, 1834 AE 85 years & 6 m'os.||
A Revolutionary Soldier||
May they rest in peace until the resurrection morn.|\n|-\n|
August 7, 1745||
Oct. 14, 1837 age 92 years||
His Wife||
|\n|-\n|
January 20, 1835||
August 1, 1910||
Uncle||
Be ye therefore also ready, for in such an
hour as ye think not, the son of man cometh. |\n|-\n|
Elenor A. Goodspeed||
||
April 10, 1860 AE 2 y'rs
6 m'os & 25 d's.||
Daughter of S. & M. Watson||
Little hearts forever stainless
Little hands as pure as they
Little feet by angels guided,
Never a forbidding way. |\n|-\n|
George S. Watson||
||
April 9, 1860 AE 1 y'r 1 m'o
& 24 d's||
Son of S. & M. Watson||
They are going ever going,
Leaving many a lonley (sic) spot,
But tis Jesus who has called them
Suffer and forbid them not.|\n</tbody>
|}
Under the terms of the will of Alfred W. Currier, the Goodspeed Cemetery, which was a part of his property in Franklin Falls, is closed.
Essex County Republican, September 17, 1891
Four Generations of Patriotism.
A visitor of the. Adirondack wildnerness brings a story of a little "city of the dead," which is a reminder that the old American is to be found hidden away in most inaccessible places, but that it never forgets the traditions of patriotism which it helped to make.
He was on a fishing excursion and had come to the foot of the White Face Mountain. It is in the township of St. Armand, Essex County. A few farmers manage to make a living there by digging at the granite hills. They are plain men, but they are men, just the same. The thing they are proudest of is their little graveyard and the story it tells. It is a little plot on the mountain aide hardly an eighth of an acre in extent. The census showed that only nineteen people had settled in that little spot. though they began to come there at the beginning of the century. One of the farmers of the township is Elias Goodspeed, a veteran of the Civil War. He took the fisherman inside the high picket fence of the little yard and pointed out the memorials of his family. The graves were covered with the wildflowers of the mountain, as native there as the family seemed to be. First, there was the patriarch Nathaniel Goodspeed. He fought in the Revolution and when it was over went up among the Adirondack pines. He lived to be eighty-five years old, and, on Christmas Day, 1834, he died. He lived long enough to instill patriotism into his son Elias and to see him a soldier in the War of 1812. Elias has good reason to be long-lived. Elias Goodspeed lived until 1870, when he was eighty-nine years old. He followed his fathers example, and he did more. He had no son then to send, but he sent six grandsons to the war. One of them keeps in mind the inscription on his grandfather's tomb, "Gone, but not Forgotten," and regularly goes to the mountains for the finest of the wild flowers that do not of themselves creep dawn so low; and keeps them planted on that grave. The other boy was William Goodspeed. He was a cavalryman in Company D, 3d New York Volunteers. He did not live to see peace, as did his fathers. He died in 1864, when twenty-two years old. Some mountain poet carved upon the stone :
Sleep to-day ! O early fallen.
In thy green and narrow bed ;
Dirges from the pine and cypress
Mingle with the tears we shed.
These and their kinsfolk fill the little yard. Their people still live among the pines and cypress and granite rocks. The fisherman came away wondering if there was another spot in the country where one isolated family could show a nobler record of patriotism handed down through four generations.
Adirondack Daily Enterprise, November 15, 1976
Paul Smith's College preserving glimpse of area history
Special to the Adirondack Daily Enterprise
By ELAYNE CREE
SARANAC LAKE — "Down the Franklin Falls road about a mile past the picturesque old Arnold farm, guarded by the majestic splendor of Whiteface Mountain, will be found a tiny graveyard", wrote the late Gertrude B. Currier wife of Mr. Alfred W. Currier of Saranac Lake, in her diary. "To read the epitaphs on the century-old headstones," the diary continues, "is to visualize the life story of the Goodspeed family, who evidently were pioneers in this North Country... Great fields, cleared from the dense forests are testimony of the hardiness of the pioneers who opened a new land in America."
The Goodspeeds, who date back to the Mayflower, originally settled on 40 acres of land in the town of St. Armand 1829, which apparently they had received as remuneration for service in the Revolutionary War. Records show that four generations of Goodspeed men fought in three major wars — the Revolution, War of 1812 and the Civil War. The headstones of the graves, which face away from the road, are visited each year by the family's descendants, some of whom still live in the Bloomingdale area.
The Goodspeed house, dated 1836, remained in the family until 1914, when Baron D. Ling became the owner. Then, in 1935, Alfred W. Currier purchased the old homestead and some additional land, now totaling about 400 acres, which he has since donated to Paul Smith's College of Arts and Sciences.
The college maintains the original building which still has the original, ax-hewn spruce logs held by square-peg nails. The college also maintains the nearby graveyard where Nathaniel Goodspeed (d. 1834) his descendants and Mrs. Currier are interred. The lands surrounding the historic site are now being used for long-term research of white pine, oak, black walnut yellow birch, Douglas fir and hybrid larch at the behest of Mr. Currier. The projects which are under the direction of Dr. Fred M. Hunt, head of the Lands Department, PSC, and his assistant, Fred Klein, provide forestry students with the opportunity to study various aspects of forest lands management.
Of particular interest to Mr. Currier, and initiated by him is the study of the potential size and longevity of the white pine. A total of 13 white pines of outstanding size, quality and vigor were chosen by Mr. Currier to be spared forever from cutting so that their fullest potential might be realized. In addition, there is a large research project devoted solely to white pine plantation thinning. Other projects include a yellow birch plantation and hardwood plots which will provide a comparison of growth rates between white pine and various hardwood species.
Thomas N. Stainback, president of Paul Smith's, is one of the many who praises Mr. Currier for this substantial gift to the school. Stainback said, "The altruism of A.W. Currier will benefit the students of Paul Smith's for several generations now, as it is his wish that they may learn the good forest management practices started years ago on this historic land. The memory of the Goodspeed family and their struggle to survive will also be preserved in the old homestead and quiet gravestones which are still nestled among the pine, the cedar and the granite rocks of St. Armand." He adds "Paul Smith's College is honored to have been selected by Mr. Currier to perpetuate this glimpse of early Adirondack Americana."
This cemetery was compiled for the Northern New York Tombstone Transcription Project on April 1976 by a member of the Saranac Lake Genealogical & Historical Society and entered by Ralph W. Bennett. It was verified and photographed by Joyce M. Ranieri & Dorothy Horan on 8 September 2001.
External link:
- Northern New York Tombstone Transcription Project, [Cemetery]