Established in 1986, Ironside Funeral Home, Inc. has been providing the Oneida community complete memorialization of a life that has passed with all forms of funeral services including the traditional funeral with viewing, cremation with memorial...
Funeral Homes in Peterboro, NY
Places
Below you fill find all funeral homes and cemeteries in or near Peterboro.
Suburbs of Peterboro: Smithfield.
Zip codes in the city: 13134.
Madison County funeral flowers can be purchased from one of the local funeral shops we partner with.
As one of the pioneering families of the area and having a rich history, the Fergersons hold a deep appreciation for the community. The family actively participates in charting North Syracuse's future growth and development. Alfred E. Fergerson...
Nearby Funeral Homes for Peterboro
Sherburne, NY 13460
Morrisville, NY 13408
New Berlin, NY 13411
East Syracuse, NY 13057
Jamesville, NY 13078
Fayetteville, NY 13066
Syracuse, NY 13219
Syracuse, NY 13205
Syracuse, NY 13214
Syracuse, NY 13204
Syracuse, NY 13209
Syracuse, NY 13208
North Syracuse, NY 13212
East Syracuse, NY 13057
Syracuse, NY 13208
Syracuse, NY 13203
Syracuse, NY 13205
Syracuse, NY 13204
Syracuse, NY 13204
Syracuse, NY 13206
Syracuse, NY 13204
Syracuse, NY 13204
Brewerton, NY 13029
Cazenovia, NY 13035
Bridgeport, NY 13030
Facts about the city
Peterboro, located about twenty-five miles southeast of Syracuse, New York, is a historic hamlet situated in the Town of Smithfield, Madison County, New York.
Peterboro Obituaries
There are no obituaries in our database for this location.
History
The Smith estate also served as an important meeting place for abolitionists from both New York and other parts of the country, including John Brown (abolitionist) Brown and Frederick Douglass. Peterboro, located about twenty-five miles southeast of Syracuse, New York New York, is a historic Administrative divisions of New York#Hamlet situated in the Smithfield, New York of Smithfield, Madison County, New York County, New York. Smith moved his family to Peterboro in 1804 and built the family home there. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a founder of the women's rights movement and cousin of Gerrit Smith's on his mother's side, met her husband, Henry Stanton B.
Gerrit Smith's commitment to both the abolition and temperance movements led to the Smith estate in Peterboro becoming a stop on the underground railroad and to Smith building one of the first temperance hotels in the country in Peterboro.
News
There is no news for this location at this time.