Advertisement

William Loyal Beardsley

Advertisement

William Loyal Beardsley

Birth
Death
18 Mar 1883 (aged 67)
Oxford, Chenango County, New York, USA
Burial
Oxford, Chenango County, New York, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
BEARDSLEY: In Oxford [Chenango Co., NY] March 18th, Mr. William L. Beardsley, in the 65th year of his age. He had been a resident of the village all his life, and largely engaged in promoting its material interests. In early life he taught and had excellent success in many of the best district schools in the County. He was a close student, and widely read in all matters of education, both philosophical and scientific. His business was that of stone mason, which he followed with his accustomed energy. Beginning with no capital, he soon gained control and operated the best quarries in Oxford and adjacent towns. To him, perhaps more than to any other man, the village of Oxford owes some of its best residences. His work was well done, and everything he undertook was carried to completion in workmanlike manner. During his whole life he was a faithful and devoted member of the Baptist Church, and an earnest worker in the Sabbath School, always ready to promote any work of benevolence, and ready to respond to any appeal for help from the needy, so far as his means allowed. He leaves a widow stricken with paralysis, and a wide circle of earnest friends to mourn his loss. [Chenango Semi-Weekly Telegraph, April 4, 1883]

Father of Little Merritt Beardsley

A Window in a Grave

"But, Daddy, I don't want to die. I'm afraid to be up there in the cemetery in a dark grave alone. Daddy, do I have to die?"
Little 8 year old Merritt Beardsley turned a hot feverish face to his father, who sat by his bedside. The cold wind of mid-December beat against the old farmhouse in the hills near Oxford and blew tiny jets of snow in around the window. The child was growing steadily weaker. It could only be a few hours now.
"Daddy, can't I have a window in my grave so I won't be in the dark? I am afraid of the dark Daddy."
Stalwart William Beardsley nodded his head. He was silent as his rough hand, made hard by years of toil in the fields, held the soft hot little hand of his son. Yes, if it would make the journey across the silent river any easier for the child, he would promise. Some way he would keep that promise.
"Yes, son," he said, trying to keep his voice from shaking, "you shall have your window. I'll make it so the morning sun will come in it every day. You shall not be in the dark."
So, on that bleak, cold night in late December, 1865, little Merritt Beardsley smiled faintly in gratitude to his grief-stricken father, and turned to greet an Unseen Messenger who had come to bear him to another realm, where pain and fever are unknown.
Today, in a tiny forgotten cemetery, far up in the Chenango hills, an unusual grave lies amoung a group of pines. The grave is a sepulcher built from stones from the field, and covered with a large stone slab. On one end of the tomb is a large, solid flat field stone, but in the middle of this stone is cut a square hole, into which is fitted a glass pane -- a window through which the morning sun can shine!
The little grave now has few visitors. Hidden behind the fieldstone wall of the cemetery, and lying in the midst of tall grass and weeds, it is not seen from the road. Neither are two other graves that are near it. A marker nearby tells how, 23 later, the father came to join his little son, to whom he had made a sacred promise one wild December night long ago. Another inscription, without a date, tells that Sarah, "The Beloved Wife of Williiam Beardsley" had also forgotten the toils of this world. The family is finally reunited in death.
Around the little group of pines a soft carpet of myrtle silences the tread of the visitor. Wild pinks, digitalis and ferns add an everlasting funereal atmosphere to the scene. Each morning as the sun rises over the hills to the east, the first gentle rays shine in through the window, as though to comfort the child who sleeps there.
The winds of a hundred Decembers have blown across the little cemetery in the Oxford hills, and the story of little Merritt Beardsley has been forgotten by all but the very old folks. But the grave is still there and the tiny coffin can be seen through the window cut in the slab of field stone.
As one stands and silently studies the hewn window, he tries to imagine what a labor of love it must have been for that forgotten father who kept his promise to the dying boy who was afraid of the dark.
From "Oxcarts Along The Chenango" by Roy Gallinger; published 1965 Fay Edward Faulkner, Heritage Press, Sherburne, NY.



Sandy Goodspeed adds: Merritt F Beardsley (1857-1865 Dec 15), s/o of William L Beardsley (1815-1883) and Sarah (Walker) Beardsley (1819-1885). Sarah was the daughter of James Walker and Jane (Padgett) Walker. The Cemetery is the Miller Cemetery located on the Rounds Farm in Oxford, NY.

http://www.enter.net/~torve/trogholm/geneal/padget/padgdoc/merritt.htm
BEARDSLEY: In Oxford [Chenango Co., NY] March 18th, Mr. William L. Beardsley, in the 65th year of his age. He had been a resident of the village all his life, and largely engaged in promoting its material interests. In early life he taught and had excellent success in many of the best district schools in the County. He was a close student, and widely read in all matters of education, both philosophical and scientific. His business was that of stone mason, which he followed with his accustomed energy. Beginning with no capital, he soon gained control and operated the best quarries in Oxford and adjacent towns. To him, perhaps more than to any other man, the village of Oxford owes some of its best residences. His work was well done, and everything he undertook was carried to completion in workmanlike manner. During his whole life he was a faithful and devoted member of the Baptist Church, and an earnest worker in the Sabbath School, always ready to promote any work of benevolence, and ready to respond to any appeal for help from the needy, so far as his means allowed. He leaves a widow stricken with paralysis, and a wide circle of earnest friends to mourn his loss. [Chenango Semi-Weekly Telegraph, April 4, 1883]

Father of Little Merritt Beardsley

A Window in a Grave

"But, Daddy, I don't want to die. I'm afraid to be up there in the cemetery in a dark grave alone. Daddy, do I have to die?"
Little 8 year old Merritt Beardsley turned a hot feverish face to his father, who sat by his bedside. The cold wind of mid-December beat against the old farmhouse in the hills near Oxford and blew tiny jets of snow in around the window. The child was growing steadily weaker. It could only be a few hours now.
"Daddy, can't I have a window in my grave so I won't be in the dark? I am afraid of the dark Daddy."
Stalwart William Beardsley nodded his head. He was silent as his rough hand, made hard by years of toil in the fields, held the soft hot little hand of his son. Yes, if it would make the journey across the silent river any easier for the child, he would promise. Some way he would keep that promise.
"Yes, son," he said, trying to keep his voice from shaking, "you shall have your window. I'll make it so the morning sun will come in it every day. You shall not be in the dark."
So, on that bleak, cold night in late December, 1865, little Merritt Beardsley smiled faintly in gratitude to his grief-stricken father, and turned to greet an Unseen Messenger who had come to bear him to another realm, where pain and fever are unknown.
Today, in a tiny forgotten cemetery, far up in the Chenango hills, an unusual grave lies amoung a group of pines. The grave is a sepulcher built from stones from the field, and covered with a large stone slab. On one end of the tomb is a large, solid flat field stone, but in the middle of this stone is cut a square hole, into which is fitted a glass pane -- a window through which the morning sun can shine!
The little grave now has few visitors. Hidden behind the fieldstone wall of the cemetery, and lying in the midst of tall grass and weeds, it is not seen from the road. Neither are two other graves that are near it. A marker nearby tells how, 23 later, the father came to join his little son, to whom he had made a sacred promise one wild December night long ago. Another inscription, without a date, tells that Sarah, "The Beloved Wife of Williiam Beardsley" had also forgotten the toils of this world. The family is finally reunited in death.
Around the little group of pines a soft carpet of myrtle silences the tread of the visitor. Wild pinks, digitalis and ferns add an everlasting funereal atmosphere to the scene. Each morning as the sun rises over the hills to the east, the first gentle rays shine in through the window, as though to comfort the child who sleeps there.
The winds of a hundred Decembers have blown across the little cemetery in the Oxford hills, and the story of little Merritt Beardsley has been forgotten by all but the very old folks. But the grave is still there and the tiny coffin can be seen through the window cut in the slab of field stone.
As one stands and silently studies the hewn window, he tries to imagine what a labor of love it must have been for that forgotten father who kept his promise to the dying boy who was afraid of the dark.
From "Oxcarts Along The Chenango" by Roy Gallinger; published 1965 Fay Edward Faulkner, Heritage Press, Sherburne, NY.



Sandy Goodspeed adds: Merritt F Beardsley (1857-1865 Dec 15), s/o of William L Beardsley (1815-1883) and Sarah (Walker) Beardsley (1819-1885). Sarah was the daughter of James Walker and Jane (Padgett) Walker. The Cemetery is the Miller Cemetery located on the Rounds Farm in Oxford, NY.

http://www.enter.net/~torve/trogholm/geneal/padget/padgdoc/merritt.htm


Advertisement