Above
is Albert Royal Delmont Jones’ death certificate. It
is a sad document. Albert died at the New Castle County Hospital, Delaware, on
May 15, 1930. This was originally called the New Castle County Almshouse, and
was a last resort home for people who were elderly, single and poor. The
certificate shows he was 76 (linking in with a known birth year of 1854) but
that is about all the history it contains. Albert wasn’t then around to provide
any more information. So next of kin, occupation, place born – all these
sections were “no record.” Fortunately
when the census was taken earlier that year, Albert Delmont was listed as an
“inmate” and was lucid enough to state that he was from Pennsylvania, as were
his parents. Hence the match.
Even
though ADJ was a bad boy, I find it sad that no-body knew who his family were,
and there was no-one to claim him. At least two ex-wives and two of his
children were still alive at that time, but obviously no-body knew or perhaps
even cared what had happened to him.
The
New Castle County Almshouse/Hospital was located at a small place called Farnhurst,
and was next door to the quite separate Delaware State Mental Hospital. Those
who died at New Castle Hospital who had no-one to claim them for burial
elsewhere were buried in what is now called the “Cemetery in the Woods at
Farnhurst.” (Residents from the mental hospital were buried elsewhere). The
“Cemetery in the Woods” also received the bodies of premature/stillborn babies
and unidentified bodies that turned up in the nearby rivers. Several thousand people
were buried there.
This
was to be ADJ’s last resting place, what was called at the time the New Castle
County Hospital Cemetery. As a Potter’s Field cemetery, there were no named
grave markers. However, small 5” square granite markers were provided but they
only had numbers on them. It appears that a fire at the original building in
the 1950s destroyed any of the records linking names to numbers. (but see addenda below)
But
it gets worse. The cemetery was replaced by another Potter’s Field location in
the mid-1930s, and the original New Castle County Hospital Cemetery was abandoned.
Then in the late 1950s, early 1960s, around 85% of the cemetery was covered up
with the construction of the 1-295 freeway ramp to the Delaware Memorial
Bridge. It was planned to clean up the area and put up a lasting memorial, but
of course, once the road was built, that was the end of that. Apparently about
100 or so granite markers are still visible at the base of the ramp – but you
have to climb a fence and crawl over trash and brambles to get to them – and
they date from earlier decades than 1930.
So
what does this mean for ADJ? I tend to think of the possible fate of many
gangsters who disappeared in times past. In ADJ’s case, he really does appear
to be buried under the freeway.
It
is a long way from genteel grave markers in park-like cemeteries in Pittsburgh.
Addenda: very recent investigation suggests that a burial record for the year in question may have surfaced in a record office. I have
not been able as yet to access this, but even if so, all it would do is give a
number for his stone. He will still remain buried under the freeway.
Really sad
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