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If it's possible, Sylvan Cemetery, at the end of Victory Boulevard in Staten Island in the small town of Travis, is even in worse shape than Prospect Cemetery.
Sylvan Cemetery is remembered only by graffiti vandals, who tag the remaining standing headstones. |
Most of the headstones in Sylvan have been knocked over. As in Prospect Cemetery, overgrown weeds and thorns make it difficult to navigate. |
Site of Helen MacGregor Joy's grave. Helen was only two years old and lived from 1846 to 1848. |
Sylvan Cemetery bears no signs to identify it as such; I know it as Sylvan Cemetery only by a small notation on my Hagstrom map of Staten Island. Most of the stones date from the mid-to-late 1800s although I did see one or two earlier ones.
Evidence of pot parties past. |
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The Decker family, widespread in Staten Island, is well-represented here. |
A new sign and chain link fence have been installed, but vandals still regularly visit Sylvan. |
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Price's Lane is a Travis thoroughfare. |
' 1824. |
Sylvan Cemetery, with most of its stones tipped over, vandalized or graffitied on, is high on a hill overlooking the West Shore Expressway and beyond, the Arthur Kill and New Jersey.
The Cannon family is remembered by a WWI-era monument on Cannon Avenue where it meets Victory Boulevard.
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Travis, one of Staten Island's remotest neighborhoods, is located on Victory Boulevard near the Davis Wildlife Preserve in the Staten Island Greenbelt. It was formerly called Linoleumville, after a local industry. HOME | LAMPS | SUBWAYS & TRAINS | ADS | TROLLEYS | SIGNS | COBBLESTONES | STREET SCENES | YOU'D NEVER BELIEVE YOU'RE IN NYC | LINKS | ALLEYS | NECROLOGY | CEMETERIES Thanks to Jeannie Siegel for assistance with this page. |