Sylvester Feller

Publication

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Historic Red Hook

Name/Title

Sylvester Feller

Entry/Object ID

1000.3.3

Description

Cemetery Crawl entry (self-guided tour of local cemeteries with biographical profiles generated by Historic Red Hook volunteers)

Collection

Cemetery Crawl

Publication Details

Publication Type

Website Article

Publisher

Historic Red Hook

Transcription

Sylvester was the son of Henry Augustus Feller and Catherine Snyder. He was a farmer and resided in Red Hook. On Sunday, March 22nd, 1902 his oldest son, Fred, came home after serving three years in the army in the Philippines. Two hours later that night, Sylvester headed out to the post office at Barrytown. He chatted with Horace Plass for a bit, then went to cross the train tracks. He stood on the northbound tracks to wait for a long southbound freight train to pass, which might explain why he didn’t hear the approach or the whistle of the northbound express train that struck and killed him instantly. He was survived by his wife Grace, three sons, and two daughters. When Grace tried to sue the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad in 1904, they argued that Sylvester was the negligent party for standing on the tracks. The ‘towerman’ swore he heard the express train blow its whistle and the freight train conductor said he yelled at Sylvester to look out as his own (presumably slow-moving) train passed him. The case was dismissed. His wife Grace Levenworth is buried beside him despite the fact that she remarried Gordon Merrihew after Sylvester’s death.

Relationships

Related Person or Organization

Person or Organization

Feller, Sylvester

Related Places

Place

Property

Red Hook Methodist Cemetery

Village

Red Hook Village