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The Full Story

Bupp's Union

At the August 2014 CGAA Board Meeting, it was moved that a section of our website be devoted to Bupp's Union. As you read the following information, it will become clear why we decided to do this . . .

Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association
Incorporated April 20, 1936

bupp.ceme.assoc.png

This document is a partial transcription of Cemetery Association which was scanned from Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter's typed document. The scanned document contains additional information and diagrams pertaining to the property deeds registered in York County.

Incorporators and first directors

 

Walter E. Bailey (1885-1979), Loganville, Dir

 

Kerwin D. Boyer (1892-1978), Seven Valleys #

Glatfelters Station Store

 

Adam Hartman (1867-1949), Loganville, Dir.

 

Jesse K. Leader (1888-1951), York # (r) F-I-L

 

Harry Lentz (1881-1956), Seven Valleys #, Dir. SIL

 

Harvey Lentz (1879-1962), Seven Valleys #, Dir. 32 yr perfect attendance

 

Palmer McWilliams (1899-1980), Seven Valleys 32 yr Supt

 

George Meckley (1892-1956), Gladfelters

 

Bert A. Trout (1885-1979), Seven Valleys

Land of John & Barbara (Gn) Hildebrand

 

Jacob F. Trout (1872-1965), York #, Dir. bd Bupp’s

Cemetery Inscriptions
Arranged Chronologically

1779-1799
  1. Glatfelter, Margret, d. Mar. 31, 1779

  2. F. W., 1779 fieldstone

  3. Walder, Henry, d. Jan. 27, 1781, 70, fieldstone

  4. Hildebrand, Hanes, d. Apr. 2, 1783, 68, fieldstone

  5. Glfed, Pet., Feb 13, 1791 - July 16, 1792 0-15-3

  6. Hildebrand, Barbara, d. Aug. 8, 1794, fieldstone

  7. H. A., Oct. 6, 1794

  8. Ald, Ana Maria, d. Dec. 10,1794

     

1800-1825
  1. Schwartz, Jacob, d. Nov. 20, 1804, fieldstone

  2. Lentz, I. L.,1820, fieldstone

  3. L. W., 1820, fieldstone

  4. Glatfelter, Philip, d. Apr. 13, 1825, 44-9-28
     

1826-1850
  1. H. B. Apr. 11, 1827, fieldstone

  2. Hovis, Jacob, d. Aug. 1827, aged about 38 yrs. 8 mo.

  3. Hartman, Jonathan, June 29, 1803 - Oct. 6, 1827, 24-3-7

  4. Glatfelter, Meichel, d. Oct. 15, 1827

  5. Hartman, daughter of Samuel and Lydia, d. Apr. 21, 1830, 1 day

  6. Lentz, Peter, d. Aug 20, 1830, fieldstone

  7. Lentz, Lea, d. Oct. 20, 1830, fieldstone

  8. Hildebrand, Barbara, wife of Casper, d. Oct. 31, 1832, 62

  9. Howis, Adam, son of Jacob and B, d. Feb. 18, 1833, 7-8-0

  10. Gipe, Eve, d. Mar. 25, 1833

  11. Deis, Henry, Sept. 5, 1802 - July 8, 1833, 30-10-5

  12. Hildebrand, Aaron, son of Casper and Susan, d. Jan. 7, 1834, 4-8-11

  13. Glatfelter, Jacob, son of Philip and Anna Mary, d. Mar. 12, 1835, 16-8-25

  14. Glatfelter, Mary, daughter of Philip and Anna Mary, d. Apr. 25, 1835, 18-11-21

  15. Krout, Adam, Sept. 30, 1834 - July 29, 1837, 2-10-29

  16. Hartman, Lydia, wife of Samuel, June 28, 1805 - Oct. 3, 1838, 33-3-6

  17. Hartman, Frederick, July 4, 1777 - Dec. 7, 1838, 61-5-3

  18. Christina, daughter of Johanes Bop, Apr. 19, 1818 - Aug. 11, 1839, 21-3-22

  19. Bobb, George, d. Jan. 9, 1840, 30-1-18

  20. Bob, Rebecca, wife of Johan, Apr. 3, 1817 - Oct. 24, 1840, 23-6-21

  21. Hildebrand, Casper, d. Oct. 11, 1841, 84

  22. Krout, Lydia, daughter of Daniel and Catharine, d. May 27, 1843, 16

  23. Trout, C., d. Mar. 30, 1844, 4-0-16

  24. Messersmith, Sarah, wife of Michael, d. Nov. 8, 1844, 37-5-28

  25. Deis, Jacob, Feb. 27, 1825 - Sept. 22, 1844, 19-6-24

  26. Swartz, Mary, daughter of Peter and Adaline, d. 1844

  27. Hartman, Samuel, d. June 26, 1845, 3-6-12

  28. Bubb, Julian, d. Jul. 24, 1845, 15-7-0

  29. Trout, G. H., d. Aug. 20, 1845, 7-3-2

  30. Falkenstine, Susanna, wife of Lewis, Apr. 12, 1803 - Sept. 3, 1845, 42-4-21

  31. Williams, Frederick, Feb. 1780 - Feb. 28, 1847, 67 yrs ??

  32. Lentz, Julian, wife of George, d. Nov. 3, 1848, 50-8-28

  33. Bubb, Israel, Nov. 8, 1845 - Aug. 16, 1849, 3-9-8

  34. Trout, E., d. Aug. 29, 1849, 6-5-16

  35. William, Catharine, Dec. 6, 1782 - Sept. 12, 1849, 66-9-6

  36. William, Sarah E., daughter of John, d. Dec. 30 1850, 0-1-22

1851 - 1875
  1. Trout, Sarah, daughter of Jacob and Nancy, Apr. 11, 1850 - Aug. 27, 1852, 2-4-16

  2. Miller, Josiah Franklin, son of Valentine T. and Louisa, Dec. 2, 1850 - Aug. 28, 1852, 1-8-26

  3. Swartz, Jacob, son of Peter and Adaline, d. 1852

  4. Krout, John, d. Jul. 9, 1853, 22-7-29

  5. Hartman, Ann Maria, wife of Frederick, born a Hovis, Aug. 4, 1778 - Oct. 14, 1853, 75-2-10

  6. Lentz, Joseph, Dec. 25, 1793 - Sept. 24, 1854

  7. Lentz, Louise, daughter of E. and A. M., Feb. 6, 1855 - Mar. 6, 1855, 0-1-0 *

  8. Schrock, Elizabeth, d. Nov. 6, 1855, 50-3-16 *

  9. Bupp, John, d. Dec. 28, 1855, 48-10-29

  10. Hartman, son, son of Martin and Elizabeth, d. Dec. 9, 1856, 0-0-9

  11. Lentz, Ledia, daughter of E. and A. M., June 11, 1856 - Sept. 25, 1857

  12. Bobb, Malinda, daughter of John and Maria, d. Sept. 30, 1857, 0-0-12

  13. Swartz, Henry, son of Peter and Adaline, d. 1857

  14. Shaffer, daughter, daughter of Henry S. and Barbara, d. Aug. 6, 1858, 0-0-6

  15. Bobb, Jacob, son of John and Maria, d. Aug. 15, 1858, 5-11-1

  16. Falkenstine, Jacob, d. May 21, 1859, 83-8-6

  17. Glatfelter, Jesse, d. Jan. 24, 1860, 37-10-22

  18. Falkenstine, David, son of David and Mary, d. Mar. 19, 1862, 0-6-25

  19. Bopp, John, Nov. 4, 1779 - Aug. 22, 1862, 82-9-18 *

  20. Bopp, Elizabeth, wife of John Bopp, Oct. 7, 1777 - Oct. 24, 1862, 85-0-17

  21. Lentz, George, d. Feb. 27, 1863, 75-11-9

  22. Falkenstine, John, son of Henry and Leah, d. May 9, 1863, 10-0-23

  23. Bupp, Maria, wife of John F. Bupp, d. Sept. 28, 1863, 34-5-22

  24. Falkenstine, Barbara, wife of Jacob, d. Oct. 2, 1863, 85-4-28

  25. Bopp, Elizabeth, daughter of John F. and Maria, d. Oct. 13, 1863, 0-0-15

  26. Bopp, Barbara, daughter of John F. and Maria, d. Oct. 13, 1863, 0-0-18

  27. Bopp, Mary J., daughter of Jeremiah and Sarah, d. Feb. 11, 1864, 4-1-5 *

  28. Lentz, Daniel, GAR 1861-1865, d. Jun. 19, 1864, 75-6-9 *

  29. Freund, Elizabeth, daughter of Frederick and Anna, d. Sept. 25, 1864, 0-11-18

  30. Krout, Daniel, d. Oct. 1, 1864, 68

  31. Lentz, E. L. and L., 1864, fieldstone

  32. Bopp, Susan B., daughter of Jeremiah and Sarah, d. Feb. 18, 1865, 0-11-13 *

  33. Bopp, John F., son of John F. and Precilla, d. Sept. 1, 1865, 0-5-20

  34. Ness, Irah M., d. Sept. 22, 1865. 0-7-2

  35. Krout, Jacob, d. Nov. 1865, about 75 years, “as a token 1918 by John A. Krout” *1

  36. Bobb, Jeremiah W., son of Jeremiah and Sarah, d. Jan. 8, 1866, 0-0-11

  37. Falkenstine, David, d. Apr. 13, 1866, 49-8-6

  38. Lentz, Emeline, daughter of Harris and Malinda, d. Aug. 2, 1866, 1-9-0 *

  39. Lentz, Lydian, daughter of Harris and Malinda, d. Aug. 13, 1866, 3-10-0

  40. Bopp, infant, son of John F. and Precilla, d. Sept. 1, 1866, 0-0-18

  41. Falkenstine, Barbara, wife of Lewis, June 19, 1811 - Oct. 1, 1867, 56-3-12

  42. Howis, Barbara, wife of Jacob, d. Feb. 27, 1868, 79-9-18 *

  43. Bobb, Levi E.,son of Jeremiah and Sarah, d., Mar. 2, 1870, 0-5-12

  44. Bupp, Ella Mariah, daughter of John F. and Ann Priscilla, d. Nov. 21, 1870, 2-9-23

  45. Glatfelter, Alpheus, son of Julia A. Bupp, d. Mar. 8, 1871, 0-7-28 *

  46. Bupp, Tapy, daughter of John F. and Prissillia, d. Sept. 10, 1871, 0-7-28

  47. Beck, Ellen M., daughter of Julia A. Bupp, d. Jul. 31, 1872, 0-5-7 *

  48. Falkenstine, Henry F., May 2, 1832 - Oct. 31, 1872, 40-5-29

  49. Bupp, Mary E., daughter of Benjamin and Louisa, d. Jan. 13, 1873, 1-0-28 *

  50. Lentz, Catharine, wife of Joseph, d. Nov. 21, 1873, 72-10-11

  51. Jones, Emeline, daughter of Wm S. and Henrietta, Dec. 24, 1870 - May 22, 1874, 3-4-28

  52. Ness, mary, wife of WIlliam A., d. Aug. 1, 1874, 39-6-27

  53. Raffensperger, Sylvester, Nov. 20, 1874 - Jan. 9, 1875 *

  54. Rose (Roser), Susanna, daughter of Lorentz and E., d. Feb. 5,1875, 74-2-15

  55. Bupp, Barbara, wife of John, d. Jul. 14, 1875, 72-3-24

1876 - 1900
  1. Barns (Burns), Sarah, daughter of William D. and Catharine, d. May 2, 1876, 0-8-27 *

  2. Trout, John V., son of John V. and Mary A., d. Jul. 8, 1877, 0-8-26

  3. Schrum, Daniel, son of Michael and Julian, d. Apr. 11, 1878, 1-2-9

  4. Schrum, Ida R., daughter of Michael and Julian, d. Apr. 19, 1878, 11-11-18

  5. Schrum, Charles, son of Michael and Julian, d. Apr. 27, 1878, 2-2-29

  6. Glatfelter, Anna Mary, wife of Philip, d. Dec. 29, 1878, 94-11-11

  7. Glesner, Mary A., d. Jan. 36-9-10

  8. Krout, Catharine, wife of Daniel, d. Feb. 18, 1879, 74-7-11 *2

  9. Jones, Nora, daughter of William S. and H., d. Apr. 20, 1879, 2-3-7

  10. Trout, Adam W., son of John V. and Mary A., d. Nov. 26, 1879, 5-0-9

  11. Falkenstine, Lizzie C.,daughter of Lewis L. and Leah J., d. Feb. 12, 1881, 3-2-17

  12. Bupp, Alfred E., son of Jeremiah and Sarah, d. Apr. 19, 1881, 4-2-20

  13. Trout, Sarah C., daughter of John V. and Mary A., d. Apr. 20, 1881, 10-7-6

  14. Trout, Alvin S., son of John V. and Mary A., d. Apr. 22, 1881, 2-2-3

  15. Trout, William H., son of John V. and Mary A., d. May 4, 1881, 14-5-16

  16. Falkenstine, Chancy J., son of Samuel L. and Emma, d. Feb. 25, 1884, 0-5-7

  17. Sheffer, Henry S., Sept. 26, 1829 - Mar. 31, 1885

  18. Trout, Catharine, wife of Adam, d. Feb. 23, 1887, 77-10-1

  19. Linburg, Wesley G., son of Joseph A. and Sarah N., d. June 15, 1887, 0-0-28

  20. Grove, Mary, d. Mar. 13, 1888, 65-11-1

  21. Falkenstine, Lewis, d. Apr. 7, 1888, 83-3-3

  22. Bupp, Susanna, wife of Lewis, d. Apr. 15, 1888, 81-9-22

  23. Falkenstine, John, d. May 9, 1888, 78-0-3

  24. Stine, Minnie C., daughter of Isreal and Sarah, d. Sept. 13, 1888, 2-0-13

  25. Swartz, Alvin R., son of John and Amanda, Oct. 31, - 1888 - Nov. 5, 1889, 1-0-5

  26. Messersmith, Michael, d. Feb. 6, 1890, 89-1-11

  27. Lentz, daughter of Cornelius and Ida, b. June 7, 1890

  28. Trout, Adam, d. Aug. 21, 1890, 78-10-14

  29. Bubb, Lewis, d. Nov. 12, 1891, 89-6-0

  30. Trout, William, d. Dec. 12, 1892, 47-4-4

  31. Trout, Lottie E., daughter of Wiliam and Maria, d. Dec. 26, 1892, 1-4-29

  32. Swartz, Peter, d. Mar. 15, 1893, 76-5-4

  33. Lentz, Lydia, wife of Daniel, d. Sept. 29, 1893, 92-6-14

  34. Bare, Matilda, wife of George F., d. Dec. 27, 1893, 69-10-23

  35. Falkenstine, Leah, wife of John, Jan. 31, 1814 - Feb. 9, 1896, 82-0-9

  36. Swartz, Adalina, wife of Peter, d. Apr. 22, 1896, 72-7-21

  37. Sheffer, Raymon S., son of W. A. and Sarah, d. Sept. 13, 1896, 0-5-13

  38. Lentz, Emanuel, d. Nov. 16, 1896, 68-0-4

  39. Lentz, Adam, d. Jan. 4, 1897, 75-0-19

  40. Bupp, Benjamin, d. June 3, 1899, 52-9-7

  41. Falkenstine, Henry K., Oct. 23, 1813 - Apr. 2, 1900, 86-5-9

1901 - 1934
  1. Messersmith, Granville, d. Oct. 8, 1902, 76-7-6

  2. Lentz, Caroline, wife of Adam, Sept. 12, 1827 - Mar. 20, 1903, 75-6-8

  3. Krout, Levi, July 10, 1837 - July 7, 1903, 65-11-27

  4. Lentz, Maria, wife of Emanuel, d. July 11, 1908, 73-7-14

  5. Falkenstine, Leah, wife of Henry K., Dec. 13, 1838 - Feb. 4, 1909, 71-2-21

  6. Bupp, John F., d. Aug. 26, 1903, 76-0-23

  7. Sheffer, Willard C., son of George H. and Susan A., d. May 16, 1910, 19-2-17

  8. Brodbeck, William Wesley, Mar. 15, 1876 - Sept. 22, 1910, 34-6-7

  9. Noel, Mary E., wife of Augustus, Mar. 9, 1880 - Dec. 5, 1911, 31-8-26

  10. Trout, John V., Jan. 13, 1836 - Dec. 5, 1912

  11. Bupp, Precilla, wife of John F., 1835 - 1912

  12. Burns, Catharine Lentz, wife of William D., Dec. 15, 1914 only date

  13. Lentz, Harris, Oct. 4, 1835 - Feb. 12, 1915, 79-4-8

  14. Krout, WIlliam, Oct. 25, 1846 - Apr. 10, 1915

  15. Trout, Mary A., wife of John V., Dec. 1, 1847 - Mar. 12, 1918

  16. Stine, Sarah Ann, d. Oct. 7, 1919, 65-5-28

  17. Lentz, Malinda, wife of Harris, Dec. 31, 1841 - Oct. 25, 1919, 77-9-24

  18. Bupp, Sadie, 1887 - 1919

  19. Stine, Israel, d. June 9, 1921, 69-1-16, tin marker

  20. Bupp, Louisa, 1847 - 1921

  21. Sheffer, Barbara A., wife of Henry S., Apr. 3, 1887 - Apr. 8, 1922

  22. Shaffer, George H., d. Jan. 26, 1925, 60-8-29

  23. Noel, Augustus, d. July 22, 1926, 55-10-17, wooden marker

  24. Lehman, Nora Ellen, d. Jan. 7, 1929, 33-9-8, tin marker

  25. Bupp, Paul Levi, d. Nov. 9, 1931, 2-6-8

  26. Messersmith, Henry, d. Sept. 28, 1932, 76-5-24 tin marker

  27. Lehman, Leona R., d. Sept. 30, 1934, 14-6-4, wooden marker

  28. Sheffer, Susan A., wife of George H., no dates *3

  29. Messersmith, Julian, wife of Granville, no dates

  30. Hengst, infant son of F. D. and Cora E., no dates

  31. Trout, Maria, 1850 - 1934

1935 - 1995
  1. Trout, Sallie, 1874 - 1939

  2. Heavel, Susie V., 1859 - 1940

  3. Trout, Emilima, 1855 - 1941

  4. Sheffer, Susan A., d. Jan. 9, 1942, 72-6-5 *3

  5. Trout, Bert G., 1878 - 1944

  6. Burns, Laura, 1871 - 1945

  7. Messersmith, Menerva, 1881 - 1946

  8. Messersmith, John W., 1886 - 1947

  9. Trout, John, 1882 - 1949

  10. Falkenstein, George, July 16, 1859 - Aug. 17, 1949

  11. Bupp, Ida S., 1879 - 1950

  12. Carter, Richard Lee, 1906 - 1953

  13. Hengst, Cora E., 1885 - 1959

  14. Lehman, WIlliam, 1887 - 1959

  15. Bupp, Eli A., 1874 - 1960

  16. Burns, Leah, 1876 - 1962

  17. Trout, Jacob F., 1872 - 1965

  18. Bupp, John W., Dec. 30, 1934 - Aug. 22, 1965

  19. Hengst, Frank D., 1881 - 1967

  20. Bupp, Warren J., 1897 - 1984

  21. Bupp, Effie, d. Jan. 29, 1995, 90

 

Dates of death recorded on tombstones by periods

 

Before 1799 - 8

1800 - 1825 - 4

1826 - 1850 - 36

1851 - 1875 - 55

1876 - 1900 - 41

1901 - 1934 - 27

Total:  171
* Burials Reported by Rev. Constantine J. Deininger at Bupp’s School House, or at Bupp’s

*1 83. Recorded as Jacob Kraut, Dec. 15, 1787 - Nov. 28, 1864, 76-11-10

*2 111. Catharine Kraut, July 7, 1804 - Feb. 18, 1879, 74-7-11

*3 172 and 179 may be the same person

 

1855 - 1879 Deininger reported 19 burials.

For five there were no stones standing in 1932. In the case of Jacob Kraut, the stone was erected much later and the year of death was incorrectly given.

 

Miller, Lewis, d. Apr. 7, 1856, 0-3-17

Williams, Jesse, d. May 2, 1857, 29-10-7

Williams, Jesse, d. Oct. 5, 1858, 0-9-16

Bubb, Adam, d. Aug. 28, 1863, 1-3-17

Charles H. Glatfelter, December 1999

_______________

Transcriber’s note:

There is a discrepancy in the numbering in light of the four burials (Miller, Williams, WIlliams, and Bubb) as well as Sheffer (listed here as 172 and/or possibly 179). As a result, the burials total either 199, or 200.

During the period of 1851 - 1875 the number of burials total 59.

During the period of 1935 - 1995 the number of burials total 21.

 

This document is a transcription of Cemetery Inscriptions  which was a scanned compilation of three typed documents by Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter.

Committee Letter

This document is a transcription of Historical Committee Letter which was scanned from Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter's typed document. LINK DOES NOT WORK

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To the members of the historical committee,

On August 18,2006 I met with Ted R. Meckley at his home, 258 Lindy Road, Seven Valleys, for about 45 minutes. Although he was preparing for a business-related trip to Mexico, he was willing to meet with me for that time.

 

Born in 1947, he remembers attending Bupp’s Union Sunday school from the time he was a very small boy. When I asked him whether he remembered anything about the first five directors of the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association, who took office in 1936 and whom I named for him, he recalled only one: Harvey Lentz. He was a veteran member of the Sunday school, Ted said, who from time to time had a part in the program, regularly wearing his perfect attendance badge, complete with its long, long string of annual award attachments.

 

Ted remembered very little about how the cemetery association operated in its early years. When I asked him to identify Harry Leader, Jacobus, to whom a 1937 deed was to be returned after it was recorded in 1962, he remembered the name. When I asked him to identify Raymond E. Meckley, to whom the 1966 deed, recorded in that year was returned, he said that Raymond Meckley is his father. After one or more strokes, he now suffers from dementia and is in a nursing home. For many years Raymond Meckley was one of the director of the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association and for a long time was its treasurer.

 

As a teenager Ted was chosen superintendent of the Sunday school, which for years attracted enough interest in the neighborhood to be a functioning organization. Ted told me what some have told me in the past. Persons attended the Sunday school and then went to worship services in the congregation of which they or their parents were members. Ted also told me what others told me in the past. For many years these congregations were four in number: Salem Lutheran and Reformed (now United Church of Christ) in Jacobus, the Methodist church in Jacobus, and the Codorus Church of the Brethren.

 

As long as Bupp’s Union Sunday school was what has been described as a functioning organization, the weekly offerings received were enough to meet the few expenses required to keep the church (or more properly meetinghouse) and graveyard in acceptable repair. The day came when that was no longer the case. By about 1990 Sunday school attendance had dropped to about twelve. The few remaining members decided that the time had come to discontinue the school. Ted remembers that these few members belonged to either the Lutheran or United Church congregation in Jacobus.

 

The end of the Sunday school raised the immediate question of what to do with the graveyard. It is evident from what Ted told me and from an account which appeared in the York Daily Record on November 23, 2002 (for which he contributed much of the information) that he recognized the historical character of the graveyard and the need to preserve it. It is also evident from the same source that he believed the best way, and maybe the only way, to accomplish this was by making the meetinghouse available on easy terms to a religious organization which would also care for the graveyard.

According to Ted, about the time the Sunday school ceased to function - he did not know the exact time - the board of directors of the cemetery association was reorganized. It then consisted of himself as president, Gary Shearer as vice president, Charlene Shearer as secretary, Raymond Meckley as treasurer, and Glen Doll as member.

 

Ted told me that on several occasions about this time he tried to interest some or all of the four former associated churches in supporting the cemetery association financially, but to no avail. He also named several Glatfelters to whom he had spoken about support, but none seemed interested enough to bring the subject before the board of directors. I have no recollection of its ever being mentioned in a board meeting.

 

About 1987, and thus before the Sunday school was abandoned, a small congregation known as Souls’ Haven Temple Baptist church began using the meetinghouse and caring for the graveyard. On at least one occasion the association board paid the church for its work. About 2001 Souls’ Haven left to merge with another congregation elsewhere.

 

In an effort to attract a new tenant, the cemetery association placed a notice in a newsletter of the York County Council of Churches. A response subsequently came form a group affiliated with the American Catholic Church in the United States. The discussions which followed resulted in an agreement which altered in a major way the authority for the cemetery association.

 

Ted Meckley told me that sometime during the year 2002 the remaining members of the board of directors of the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association resigned their offices and persons representing what was called Resurrection Church at Bupp’s Union succeeded them as directors. Nothing of this transaction, he assured me, was committed to writing at any time.

 

The account of this transaction as found in the November 23, 2002 edition of the York Daily Record reads as follows:

The association agreed to give the building and cemetery to Resurrection as

if the property was being passed on from one generation to another Meckley

says. In return, the congregation has promised to keep the building and

cemetery in good condition.

 

Ted told me that all of the known records of the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association were turned over to the new directors. He was not certain of the volume of these records, but he believed that some of the documents were quite old. The monetary assets of the association, consisting of a bank account and several certificates of deposit, were also turned over.

 

The congregation of Resurrection church at Bupp’s Union did not last long. By early May 2006 there was a “for rent” sign in a meetinghouse window. Several of the officers of the American Catholic church concerned with Bupp’s Union are no longer affiliated with it.

 

In my August 10 letter to Ted Meckley, I explained to him that the historical committee of the Glattfelder Association wanted to determine whether there is a functioning Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association and, if not, how it might be reactivated. My interview certainly provided what was for me some new information on these topics. Interesting enough, without any prompting on my part, Ted told me that he would be willing to contact some of the church officials still interested in Bupp’s Union if we are interested in attempting to reactivate the cemetery association under new auspices. The only thing he would not be willing to do is become a board member again, if only because he has no relatives (at least known relatives) buried in the graveyard.

 

Charles H. Glatfelter

Historian

Copy to Henry B. Leader

 

This document is a transcription of Historical Committee Letter which was scanned from Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter's typed document.

The Graveyard at Bupp's Union

This document is a transcription of The Graveyard at Bupp's Union which was scanned from Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter's typed document.

Bupp’s Union cemetery or graveyard is located a short distance west of Loganville in Springfield township, York county. It contains about 200 tombstone inscriptions; the oldest, dated 1779, is for Margaret Glatfelter and the most recent, dated 1984, is for Warren J. Bupp. There are also unmarked graves, obviously the total number of which is not known. The most recent unmarked grave is that of Effie A. Bupp, widow of Warren J., who died in 1995.

 

The land on which the graveyard rests was originally claimed, in 1762, by Rudolph Yount, or Yunt. He was one of the founders of the Codorus congregation of the Church of the Brethren. In 1777 Yunt sold his holdings at this place to Bernard Bupp, whose son John obtained a patent deed for 200 acres from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1821.

 

There were no buildings in the immediate vicinity of the graveyard until about 1850, when Springfield township adopted from Pennsylvania public school system, bough a small tract from John Bupp across the road from the graveyard, and built what became known as Bupp’s schoolhouse.

 

In 1871 members of several denominations (we do not know how many or from what denominations) united to build a meetinghouse about 175 feet north of the schoolhouse. Although the newspaper notice of the dedication called the new structure a union church, it never became the property of an organized congregation. It was used for Sunday school purposes by persons belonging to several nearby churches and as the site of occasional preaching.

 

During the nineteenth century there were about 100 marked burials in the graveyard. Some were Falkenstines, who were Brethren people; some were Lentzes and Trouts, who were Lutheran; and some were Bupps and Glatfelters, who were Reformed.

 

For reasons now unknown, on April 20, 1936 ten men living in the general vicinity of the graveyard, none of them named Glatfelter, united to secure from the York county court a charter of incorporation for the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association. The charter defined the purpose: “to provide and maintain a suitable place for the burial of the dead and to transact the business incident thereto.” The association, it declared, “does not contemplate pecuniary gain or profit, material or otherwise, to its members.” The charter designated five of the ten incorporators members of the board of directors, to serve until “election of their successors.” There is no mention in the charter of the meetinghouse property across the road.

 

In November 1937, for $1, four men identifying themselves as “trustees Bupp’s Union Church, and unincorporated association” transferred two tracts to the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association. The courses and distances of the tracts transferred by this deed are those of the present graveyard property. All four of the grantors of this deed were incorporators of the cemetery association the year before.

 

The arrangement for the care of the graveyard as prescribed in the charter worked reasonably well until about 1990, when declining interest in the Sunday school prompted its officers, who were apparently also directors of the cemetery association, to disband. They first made the meetinghouse available to a small Baptist congregation, which agreed to keep the graveyard mowed. When that congregation moved to another location, these officers in 2002 turned over responsibility for the meetinghouse and graveyard to an independent Catholic congregation, called Resurrection church. There were no written agreements of any kind when this transfer was made. Resurrection congregation no longer uses the meetinghouse.

 

***

From the time of its organization in 1906, members of the Casper Glattfelder Association of America have had an interest in the Bupp’s Union graveyard. The organizers of the first reunion planned to hold it in the meetinghouse and chose an alternate site only when it became evident that much more space was needed. One of the first goals of the founders was to determine where Casper and his wife were buried. Even in 1906 they believed it was probably Bupp’s Union, but they could not find tombstones.

 

The search went on for more than a third of a century. While no tombstones for Casper and his wife were ever found, the presence of stones in the graveyard for close relatives who accompanied the family to America (especially Henry Walter and Barbara Hildebrand) finally led to the conclusion that Casper was also buried there. In 1954 the association placed a monument to him and both of his wives. In 2005 it placed one to Felix and his wife, between Casper on one side and Philip, son of Felix, who was the third owner of the Glattfelder homestead, on the other.

 

As responsibility for the continuing proper care of this historic graveyard became increasingly doubtful, during the planning for the centennial reunion in 2005 the historical committee of the Casper Glattfelder Association began discussing what the proper role of the association regarding the graveyard should be. After considerable discussion, our understanding of what this role should be became clear.

 

The 1936 charter of Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association is still in force. That association no longer has a functioning board of directors. The charter provides a way to reconstitute the board.

 

The charter states that the membership of the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association consists of “adult members of the immediate families as well as the descendents of anyone buried upon said burial grounds, such representatives to have but one vote for each person buried upon said burial grounds.”

 

According to this definition, each member of the historical committee of the Casper Glattfelder Association is also a member of the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association. Acting in this latter role, we propose to call a meeting of the membership to elect five persons to serve as directors of the cemetery association, who will then assume responsibility for the graveyard on a permanent basis.

 

11/2/2006

Charles H. Glatfelter

Historical Committee

The Casper Glattfelder

Association of America

 

This document is a transcription of The Graveyard at Bupp's Union which was scanned from Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter's typed document.

The Bupp's Union Monument

This document is a transcription of The Bupp's Union Monument which was scanned from Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter's typed document.

Although Dr. Noah, Granville, Harry I., and others began searching for the grave of Casper Glattfelder even before the first reunion, and although they looked for a tombstone in a number of nearby graveyards, the evidence which they needed to satisfy them was not found. In December 1906 Dr. Noah told Granville that “I agree with you in the belief that Casper was buried at Bupp’s,” but belief was not enough. In his 1914 reunion report, Harry I. said that “the very important knowledge lacking is the burial place - where is Casper’s Grave? our deceased Bro. Granville devoted much time and labor in an earnest effort to solve this question, but without success.” He asked “all Glattfelders present here today to take this matter to heart, seriously, and assist during the coming year to solve it, if it be at all possible. Where is Casper buried?”

 

There matters rested until 1934, when Dr. Ezra C. Saylor, a dentist living in Berlin, Somerset county, visited Harry I. in an effort to learn more about the place of his forbear, Solomon, in the Casper Glattfelder family. He delivered an address at the 1935 reunion and, after visiting Bupp’s Union graveyard later on that day, stated that he had found there Casper’s tombstone and therefore the long-sought burial place. The marker he identified was a field stone, bearing an inscription which appeared to be Cpet Glfed and the dates 1721 and 1792. Harry I. visited the graveyard again and at the 1936 reunion presented what he believed was “the solution of the search we made for the past thirty years.”

 

The apparent discovery and conclusion soon proved to be none at all. Both Dr. Saylor and Harry I. quickly concluded that since estate records established conclusively that Casper died in 1775, this stone belonged to someone else. Writing to Millard some months later, Harry I.  said he regretted his error and added that “we must continue looking for the truth about this unfinished part of our family records.”

 

Discovery of some new information and review of some that had long been available but ignored can be said to have “finished this part of our family records.”

 

When Shuster’s church baptismal register was discovered in 1947, it immediately became clear that the “Cpet Glfed” stone marked the grave, not of Casper the immigrant, but of his grandson, Casper, son of Henry Glatfelter, who was born in 1791, not 1721, and who died in 1792. The reunion founders beginning in 1906 were so much concerned with Casper the immigrant that they completely ignored the fact that he arrived in 1743 with his brother-in-law, Henry Walter; that several years later the two took up adjoining land along the Codorus creek; and that Casper’s nephew, John Hildebrand, became their neighbor about the same time.

 

No one has ever found any evidence that any of these close relatives were buried on their farms, but there are tombstones in the Bupp’s Union graveyard for Henry Walter (died 1781), John Hildebrand (died 1783) and his wife Barbara (died 1794). There are also tombstones here for at least three of Casper’s grandchildren, one of whom, Philip (died 1825) and later his wife Anna Marie (died 1878) owned the homestead from 1815 until 1878.

 

Since weight of the available evidence pointed to Bupp’s Union as the place of Casper’s burial, the directors voted at the 1953 reunion to place a monument in this graveyard in memory of Casper and his wives, Elizabeth and Anna Mary. Thanks to the generosity of Director Clark W. Gladfelter, a monument dealer, the cost of the stone was $300.

 

This monument was dedicated on August 15, 1954.

This document is a transcription of The Bupp's Union Monument which was scanned from Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter's typed document.

A Hurried Look At The Area

Known As Bupp’s Union

The information above is a transcription of Bupp's Union - A Hurried Look which was scanned from the typed document by Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter in 2006

  1. Rudolph Yount (or Yunt) obtained a warrant for 25 acres adjoining his other land and John Pifer in Shrewsbury township on September 23, 1762. He obtained a second warrant for 100 acres in the same township on May 2, 1770. The next month 126 acres were surveyed to him. The survey stated that the land had been improved for 16 years.

  2. William L. Gould, in his history of the Codorus Church of the Brethren (1976), entitled A Light in the Valley, includes a lengthy sketch of Rudolph Yount, submitted by a descendant. A native of Canton Basel, Switzerland, Yount (1728-1808) arrived in Philadelphia in September 1749, with his widowed mother. Later, he was baptized in the Church of the Brethren, married, and according to the 1770 survey was in Shrewsbury (now Springfield) township in 1754.


    In his famous history of the Baptists in America, published in 1770, Morgan Edwards stated that the Codorus congregation “begun to be a church about the year 1758 when one Rudy Yunt, Peter Brilharth, John Brilharth and others, united for communion of saints.”

  3. In April 1777 Rudolph Yount sold his two tracts to Bernard Bupp. He moved first to Hopewell township, York county, where he obtained a large tract of land, and then in 1794 with members of his family to Rockingham county, Virginia, where he died in 1808.

  4. Bernard Bupp owned the former Yount property until he sold it to his son John in 1799. According to the deed, it then contained 211 acres. This John Bupp (1779-1862) was married to Elizabeth Hildebrand (1777-1862), who was a granddaughter of John and Barbara (Glattfelder) Hildebrand. This John Bupp was the one who obtained a clear and full title to the former Yount property in the form of a patent deed from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The date was November 8, 1821 and the amount patented was 200 acres 116 perches. John and Elizabeth were buried at Bupp’s Union.

  5. In the early 1840s John and Elizabeth Bupp sold 208 acres of their real estate to their son, also named John (1807-1855). He was married to Barbara Falkenstine (1803-1875). She was the daughter of Jacob Falkenstine, a prominent member of the Codorus Church of the Brethren congregation, who from 1817 until 1859 owned what was once Henry Walter’s farm. When this John Bupp died on December 28, 1855, he left a widow and seven children, several of whom were minors. John and Barbara were buried at Bupp’s Union.

  6. It was during the years this John Bupp owned the former Yount property that Springfield township finally accepted public, or common, schools. Pennsylvania passed a public school act in 1834, but left it up to about 1000 districts in the state to decide whether to accept it. Unfortunately, existing records do not enable us to determine the exact year Springfield came around. The state school report for the 1849-1850 year list Springfield township as a still a non accepting district. The inventory of John Bupp lists among his assets a debt of $4 “against Common School Directors,” which means that he had sold the ground on which the first school building had probably been erected but had not been fully paid for. the state report for 1854-1855 shows that Springfield township then had a total of 8 schools and 364 students.

  7. John F. Bupp (1827-1903), the youngest son of John and Barbara, purchased his father’s real estate and took possession on January 1, 1856. He was married twice, to sisters: Maria Allison (1829-1863) and Priscilla Allison (1835-1912). By Maria he had 11 children; by Priscilla he had 4. At least 8 died young. The obituary of John F. in  the Glen Rock Itemcalled him “one of the most widely known and highly esteemed citizens of Springfield township.” He was survived by his widow and seven children. For twenty years or more he was a director of the First National Bank of Glen Rock.

    John F. Bupp died without a will. His large real estate holdings were divided in 1905 among Jeremiah Bupp (95 acres 84 perches), James Messersmith (138 acres), and Priscilla Bupp (106 acres 57 perches).

  8. The York county wall map published in 1860 shows clearly a “S.H.” or schoolhouse at Bupp’s Union and a cemetery across the road, but nothing else. The building across the road from the cemetery bears a datestone: 1871. A glance at the York Democratic Pressfor May 12, 1871 explains:

    On Thursday, May 18, (Ascension
    Day,) the new Union Church at Bopp’s
    school house, near Loganville, will be ded-
    icated. Clergymen of several religious
    denominations who have united on the build-
    ing of this church, will participate in the
    services. All are invited to attend.

    Unfortunately, the newspaper notice does not identify the “several religious denominations” who united to build this structure. For what may be the first time in print, it is called a “Union Church.” No newspaper account of the dedication exercises has been found.

  9. Some knowledge and understanding of the three parts of the Bupp’s Union complex (does this not seem too highfalutin?) - cemetery, schoolhouse, and meetinghouse - should be possible by a study of its deed history. Unfortunately (to use that word again), the results of such a study are disappointing.
    a. No deed for the graveyard proper has ever been found, recorded or unrecorded.
    b. No deed which John Bupp (1807-1855) presumably gave to the Springfield township school district in the 1850s has ever been found, recorded or unrecorded.
    c. In 1891 John F. and Priscilla Bupp deeded 31.5 perches for $1 to the school district. (Deed 9I430, recorded April 1892). Since this was the same tract the school district sold in 1933, this can be regarded as the deed which conveyed what his father should have, and may have, given about 40 years earlier.
    d. In 1894 John F. and Priscilla Bupp, for $1, deeded 18.8 perches to 4 “Trustees of Bopp’s Union Church in said Springfield Township in Trust for use of the congregation of said Church.” This piece was located between the schoolhouse and the meetinghouse. (Deed 31P423, recorded December 1945).
    e. In 1901 Harris and Malinda Lentz, for $5, conveyed 11 ½ perches to “all that have legal right to Bury their dead in the Burying ground at Bupp’s Union Church in Said Springfield Township.” (Deed 21Q30, recorded December 1945) This tract is a rectangle extending 126 feet or 7.6 perches along the west side of the graveyard.
    f. In 1933, two years after the school was closed, the school district sold to John E. and Evelyn L. Schrum for $265 what was called the “Bupp’s School property.” It contained 31.5 perches and was the same parcel sold to the school district in 1891.

  10. A significant development in the history of the Bupp’s Union complex, now reduced to a meetinghouse and a graveyard, occurred when the York county court on April 20, 1936 approved a charter of incorporation for the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association. My notes taken after reading this charter follow on the next two pages. (transcriber’s note: the handwritten notes are transcribed and are directly following this note (page 4 of 6))

 

 

______

Bupp’s Union1936York Deed 26J531

Subscribers 11 have associated themselves together and being desirous of becoming incorporated under the provisions of the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, known as the ‘Non-Profit Corporation Law,’ approved May 5, 1933, hereby declare and certify:

  1. Proposed name: Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association

  2. Location and P. O. address of initial office: R. D. 2, Seven Valleys

  3. Purpose: “to provide and maintain a suitable place for the burial of the dead and to transact the business incident thereto:’ does not contemplate pecuniary gain or profit

  4. Perpetual existence

  5. Incorporators:

B.A. Trout, SV

Palmer McWilliams, SV

George Meckley, Gladfelter

Jesse K. Leader, R. D. 2, York

K.D. Boya, R. D. SV

Harvey Lentz, R. D. SV

Harry Lentz, R. D. SV

Jacob F. Trout, R. D. York

W.E. Bailey, Loganville

Adam Hartman, Loganville

  1. Original Directors:

Harvey Lentz

Harry Lentz

Jacob F. Trout

W.E. Bailey

Adam Hartman

  1. Non-stock

  2. Assets now real estate $50, trust funds $1,210

  3. “The membership of the corporation shall consist of adult members of the immediate families as well as the descendants of anyone buried upon said burial grounds, such representatives to have but one vote for each person buried upon said burial grounds; also any person who may hereafter become the owner of a lot or lots in the cemetery of the association”

  4. Provision for establishing a fund for perpetual care from income derived from lots sold

 

application 21 Dec 1935

approval from commonwealth, name available 10 Mar 1936

Charter approved 20 Apr 1936

Recorded 21 Apr 1936
                                              ______

  1. On November 20, 1937 Adam Hartman, Jacob Trout, Walter E. Bailey, and Jesse K. Leader, calling themselves “Trustees Bupp’s Union Church, an unincorporated association, maintaining a meeting house in Springfield Township, York county,” for $1 transferred to Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association two parcels adjoining each other, with no area specified (Deed 520123, recorded March 1962).

  2. About 1945 someone prepared a draft of the complex, a copy of which is enclosed. I first saw this draft, probably in the early 1950s, when it was in the possession of J. Clair Trout. I took extensive notes. I saw it again in October 2003, when it was still in his possession. I then made a copy of the original. The copy follows.

  3. On August 3, 1966 for specific reasons unknown, but which can be guessed, three neighbors of the meetinghouse entered into an agreement with the “Bupp’s Union Church,” not the cemetery association, accepting the survey just made by Registered Surveyor Gordon L. Brown as “assurance and confirmation of its [the church’s] title in and the boundaries of the premises.” The survey, a rectangle, does not include the graveyard on the other side of the road. A copy of the survey is enclosed. The deed contains the notation that upon its being recorded the original was to be mailed to Raymond E. Meckley, R. D. 6, York, Pa.

  4. Beginning in 1987, a small congregation known as Soul’s Haven Temple Baptist church began using the meetinghouse along with the Sunday school which had been meeting there for years. The Sunday school disbanded in 1991. About 2001 Soul’s Haven left the meetinghouse to merge with a congregation on Lake road.

  5. A story in the York Daily Recordon November 23, 2002 stated that the meetinghouse was about to become the home of “an independent Catholic congregation, Resurrection Church.” The storey identified Ted Meckley as the “president and secretary of the Bupp’s Union Cemetery Association,” which “agreed to give the building and the cemetery to Resurrection Church” in return for the promise “to keep the building and cemetery in good condition.”

Despite everything written or said over the years, there is simply no evidence that, at least before 1987, there ever was an organized congregation at Bupp’s Union. There is ample evidence of a Sunday school meeting there regularly for many years (just how many has not been determined), of preaching from time to time, and of homecoming which would attract many people. What is lacking is the inclusion of Bupp’s Union as a member of a synod, classis, or conference. We are still looking for the minutes of such a body in which a minister reports Bupp’s  as one of his congregations.

There is something to be learned from a careful study of the 171 inscriptions in the graveyard that were legible in 1932.

As has been claimed, Rudolph Young may well have made the first burials, of several of his children and possibly his mother. The graveyard is clearly on his land. But he left the area in 1777.

The first eight inscriptions, before 1800, are all, or almost all, for members of the Glattfelder, Walter, and Hildebrand families. The same is true for half or more of those from 1800 to 1850. For baptismal records of many of these families we look to Shusters, Zieglers, or even to York. Felix contributed to the building of the Reformed congregation at Shusters in 1783, not to Bupp’s Union.

Many of the early inscriptions are for close neighbors: Bupps, Trouts, Lentzes, and Falkenstines. Jacob Falkenstine (1775-1859) was a prominent member of the Codorus Church of the Brethren. His home was clearly one of more than 15 in which worship services were held before the first central meeting house of that congregation was built in the Dunkard Valley in or about 1872. Many Falkenstines were buried at Bupp’s Union, one of the latest if not the latest being Rev. George Falkenstine (1859-1949), a Brethren minister for more than 50 years, author of two church histories, and first president of Elizabethtown College.

Rev. Constantine J. Deininger noted 19 burials he made there between 1855 and 1879, always at Bupp’s school house. Lutheran pastor at Salem, Jacobus, he never reported Bupp’s as one of his numerous congregations.

When John Bupp died in 1855, Rev. Daniel Gring, Reformed pastor at Shusters, officiated at the funeral. In his personal record over the next several years, he noted several Bupp confirmations, marriages, and burials. He identified them with Shusters. When John F. Bupp died in 1903, the newspaper reported that his funeral was to be held in the Bupp’s Union meetinghouse, but the pastor was the Reformed minister in Glen Rock.

Clair Trout’s family came into the area before 1850. They lived within sight of the meetinghouse. The first Trouts are buried there. Clair was knowledgeable about what went on in and just before his day, but he did not remember much about the early days. The name Yount was one he scarcely knew, at least in 2003. What he remembered was that in his early days there were four congregations which took some responsibility for the meetinghouse: Codorus Church of the Brethren, the Lutherans in Jacobus, the Reformed in Jacobus, and the Methodist (as well as their predecessors) in Jacobus. As attendance at the Sunday school diminished, so did the support, and eventually it stopped.

C. H. G.
2/23/2006

The information above is a transcription of Bupp's Union - A Hurried Look which was scanned from the typed document by Dr. Charles H. Glatfelter in 2006

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