ALLANBURG VILLAGE CEMETERY c.1813
S.E.Corner of Centre St. & Old Hwy 20 (Holland Rd.)

GPS N43 04.782 - W079 12.521

In 1797 the Patent for the land on which the cemetery is located was issued from the Crown to John Vanderburg Sr. (200 acres). It passed then to Harmonious Vanderburg in 1825, and in March of 1844 he sold 1/4 ac. to Township Wardens Josiah H.E.Page, Wm. Wright (blacksmith), and Dilly Coleman (Innkeeper).

Like the Old Beaverdams Burying Ground, burials were recorded here for many years before the property was sold to the Township.

This cemetery is one of two very early cemeteries in the old Village of Allanburg area of Thorold. The other cemetery, the Upper Cemetery, is located quite close by. The area was first known as New Holland because of the large numbers of early settlers of Dutch origin. The land on which the village developed was granted to U.E.L. John Vanderburg who emigrated in 1784 from the Mohawk Valley in New York State with his wife and children. The village itself was laid out by Samuel Keefer in 1832, who also changed the name to Allanburgh (later Allanburg), in honour of William Allan, banker and Vice-President of the Welland Canal Company. It was here that George Keefer, first President of the Welland Canal Company, turned the sod for the first canal.

Many of the earliest settlers of the Allanburg area are buried in this cemetery. The first recorded burial is that of Noah Davis who died in 1813. His stone cannot now be found. The other earliest inscription was that of Mary Chrysler (1815). It is still there and would appear to be the oldest stone in the cemetery with a readable inscription. The last known burial was that of Mary Ann Radcliffe who died in December of 1876. Many names are mentioned in this cemetery, e.g. John Chrysler, members of the Davis family, members of the Upper family, the Rannie family and others. Information on many of the names can be found in the records of the Niagara Peninsula Branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society, as well as the Research Report completed by Nora A. Reid, July 15-02.

This cemetery is an important part of the history of settlement in the Allanburg area, and, therefore, gives even greater meaning and scope to the heritage of the City of Thorold.

For description and images of other designated properties, please click links below.

Designated Properties

Allanburg Heritage Oak Tree
Allanburg United Church
Allanburg Village Cemetery

Beaverdams Burying Grounds

Beaverdams Methodist Church & Graveyard

Beckett’s Reserve, Duncan McFarland House,
Stephen Beatty House

Calcott-Walker House

Camp House

Carl, Misener, Bald Cemetery

Carnegie Library

Carr-Millar-McMillan Block
Carroll-Tracy House
Carter-Holland House

Chestnut Hall

Constable House

Decew Young House

Decou House Monument

Dobbie House
Dominion Government Building
East Side School Bell
Fire Bell

First Presbyterian Church

Flannery House
Fraser-McMann House
George Bouk House

Grenville House

Griffiths House
Kennedy-Ward House
L.G. Lorriman/Central School
Lynch House
Macartney Drug Store
Maplehurst

Memorial Park

Millar House
Millstone - Welland Mills

Moore-Lampman House
Munro House
O'Brien House
Old Firehall
Port Robinson Brick School

Quebec Bank

Robert Elliot House

Ross House

St. Andrews Presbyterian Church

Sir Edward Beatty House

Stewart House

The Stone Store

Trinity United Church
War Memorial

Welland Canal 2nd River Lock

Welland Mills