Old Burying Ground/Blauvelt Cemetery-Harrington Park Historical Society
Tappan Road
Harrington Park, NJ 07640
(201). 768-2615
https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/1653309/harrington-park-old-burial-ground
http://www.harringtonparkhistoricalsociety.com/
Open: Dawn to Dusk
Admission: Free
My review on TripAdvisor:

The historical marker for the Old Burying Ground

The wall outside the cemetery
The Old Burying Ground known also as the Blauvelt Cemetery, is an interesting look at the burial rights of prominent farming families of early Bergen County and their forgotten legacy of their contributions to building not just the County to our Country as well.
Many of these families intermarried over time combining properties and farms that over time since the turn of that last century, have become lost corners of our county’s history due to growth after WWII of suburban communities.
It is interesting to see who the movers and shakers of these communities of the past whose descendants were still live in Bergen County. The sad part is that these distant family members may not know their own family history enough to visit these tiny pieces of history that hold members who fought in the Revolutionary War and contributions to the growth of businesses with names that have been reduced to well known street addresses. A lot of history lies in these tiny plots that dot Bergen County. Here you can see the ‘ghosts’ of the past and walk past their graves to hear their stories.

The entrance to the cemetery
The History of Burying Ground:
(from the Harrington Park Historical Society)
In use for nearly two hundred years, largely by the Blauvelt family, the earliest known burial was in 1722. The cemetery contains the graves of members of other early Bergen County families, veterans of the American Revolution and slaves. Some of the tombstones are inscribed in Dutch.

The description of the family plots

The grave of Patriarch Justin Demarest

The Blauvelt family plot of Patriarch Daniel Blauvelt

The graves of members of the Blauvelt and DeGraw families

The graves of David and Helen Blauvelt

The middle of the Blauvelt family plot

The cemetery from the other side of the Blauvelt family plot

The Blauvelt and Demarest family plots (damaged tombstones)
(From the Harrington Park Historical Society)
Abraham Quackenbush (1768-1854) and his wife, Elizabeth Myers (1770-1807)) are part of the Abraham Myers family burial plot at the Old Burying Ground. In the middle of the 18th century, Abraham Myers received a royal charter from King George III to build a grist mill on the Hackensack River which his grandson John Bogert later operated, and it thereby became known as “Bogert’s Mill.”
The Myers family members interred in the plot are Abraham Myers, his wife Cathrena Nederman, daughter Cathrena, daughter Elizabeth and Abraham Quackenbush, son John Myers and wife Rebecca Durie.

The Blauvelt-Eckerson-DeGraw family graves

Patriarchs David and Helen Blauvelt family plot
Video on the Cemetery from the Harrington Park Historical Society

