Monfort Cemetery

Monfort Cemetery is located 250 feet (76 m) east of the intersection of Port Washington Boulevard (NY 101) and Main Street in Port Washington, New York, United States.[1] It contains 118 graves of some of the earliest Dutch settlers of Cow Neck (as today's Port Washington was then known) and their descendants, buried from 1737 to 1892.[1] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[1]

Monfort Cemetery
Cemetery in 2008
Shown within New York
Monfort Cemetery (the United States)
Details
Established1737
Location
E of Main St. and Port Washington Blvd., Port Washington, New York
CountryUnited States
Coordinates40°49′52″N 73°40′57″W
Typepublic
Owned byTown of North Hempstead
SizeLess than 1 acre (3,920 m²)[1]
No. of graves118[1]
Find a GraveMonfort Cemetery
Monfort Cemetery
NRHP reference No.87002301[2]
Added to NRHPJanuary 7, 1988

The cemetery is a small, nearly square plot surrounded by tall oak trees.[1] It is fenced off and locked, not open to the public.[1] The graves are arranged in 13 rows by family.[1]

Originally it was part of the 110 acre (44 ha) Rapelje farm.[1] The 1-acre (4,000 m2) property was separated from Rapelje's farm and sold in July, 1786 to members of the Onderdonk, Schenck, Hegeman and Dodge families.[3] The earliest-dated markers are those of Andries Onderdonk and his wife Geertruy, which date to 1731 and 1738 respectively.[1] Other bodies were reburied there prior to the Rapeljes' sale of the property and its official designation as a cemetery in 1796.[1]

All headstones face west.[1] The markers, mostly sandstone but for a few in marble, show a variation in styles consistent with their time periods.[1] Eighteenth-century markers are sandstone detailed with "soul effigies", a tripartite lobed top with a face in the center and other decoration in the wings.[1] By the end of that century and the beginning of the next, the lobed top was plain, the inscriptions began with "In Memory" or "In Memoriam", and there are at least two marble headstones with the willow-and-urn motif common in neoclassical gravestones from the 1820s on.[1] The last graves, from the late 19th century, are made of unadorned marble, common to that time.[1] All the tombstones seem to rise naturally out of the ground, moldy and ancient.[3]

The Monforts, one of the families with ancestors buried in the cemetery, owned and continued to maintain the cemetery not only throughout its period of active use but for almost a century thereafter.[1] In 1984 Burtis Monfort transferred it to the town of North Hempstead, which has maintained it ever since.[1]

Notable burials

Some of those buried at Monfort played important roles in early local history.[1] Martin Schenck (1740–1793) was one of the signers of North Hempstead's Declaration of Independence from then-Loyalist Hempstead during the Revolution.[1] Andrew Onderdonk (1756–1793) was a captain in the militia and later a New York State Senator.[1] Joseph Onderdonk (1766–1852) was present at George Washington's inauguration as a young man and would later introduce modern techniques to local agriculture and serve as a district highway supervisor for North Hempstead.[1] In addition, Henry Onderdonk Jr. (died 1886) was a Long Island historian who married his first cousin, Maria Onderdonk and wrote such books as "Revolutionary Incidents of Queens County."[3][4]

References

  1. LaFrank, Kathleen (August 1987). "National Register of Historic Places nomination, Monfort Cemetery". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  2. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  3. Goldberg, Nicholas. (June 15, 1988) Newsday At Cemetery, Past Lives On. Section: News; Page 37.
  4. Onderdonk Jr., Henry. (1846) Documents and letters intended to illustrate the revolutionary incidents of Queens County. Republished by I. J. Friedman Division, Kennikat Press (1970). ISBN 0-87198-074-6
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