Gravestone in the Ferree Graveyard, also called Carpenter's Cemetery, at Paradise. Grave of Leah Dubois Ferre, wife of Philip Ferree, died Septermber 12, 1758, aged 71.
Gravestone in the Ferree Graveyard, also called Carpenter's Cemetery, at Paradise. Graves of Philip Ferree, son of Philip and Leah Ferree, and his wife, Ann Copeland.
Photograph- All Saints Episcopal Cemetery, Paradise. Monument for Nathaniel and Margaret Lightner and John and Barbara Lightner who are buried in the Lightner Cemetery, Leacock Township.
Photograph- All Saints Episcopal Cemetery, Paradise. Monument for Nathaniel and Margaret Lightner and John and Barbara Lightner who are buried in the Lightner Cemetery, Leacock Township.
Description
All Saints Episcopal Cemetery, Paradise. Monument for Nathaniel and Margaret Lightner and John and Barbara Lightner who are buried in the Lightner Cemetery, Leacock Township.
Cemetery in Paradise Township where the Feree and Lefever families are buried. Boulder and bronze tablet are erected in 1917 on the tract of land near Paradise granted from William Penn in 1712 to Daniel Fiere and Isaac Lefever. These two men with Madame Fiere and family, all French Huguenots, were the first white settlers in this part of Lancaster County.
Provenance
Album of historical markers erected by the Lancaster County Historical Society, compiled by George L. Heiges in 1986.