Person:Garrit Sharp (1)

m. Abt 1770
  1. Rachel Scherp1771 -
  2. Andries Scherp1774 -
  3. Antje Scherp1775 -
  4. Garrit Sharp1776 - 1859
  5. Johanna Scherp1778 -
  6. Cornelius Sharpe1779 - 1869
  7. Maria Scherp1781 -
  8. Peter Sharp1783 - 1860
  9. Geertje Scherp1784 -
Facts and Events
Name Garrit Sharp
Gender Male
Birth[2] 27 Dec 1776 Schaghticoke Town, Rensselaer, New York, United States
Marriage to Anna Goodspeed
Death[1] 26 Nov 1859 Westerville, Franklin, Ohio, United States
Burial[1] Lincoln Street Cemetery, Franklin, Ohio, United States

Garrit Sharp built his house in 1849 [an historic site in Westerville]. Their original house was a large log cabin which also doubled as a church on Sundays. The log cabin was also sanctuary for slaves smuggled north via the "underground railroad." [Submitted to Ancestry.com by janiefanie]

"The Sharp family homes and their locations on N. State Street and Africa Road mark an important route through Westerville on the Underground Railroad. The family patriarch, Garrit Sharp, was an original settler of Sharp's Settlement, now Westerville, and donated land for and helped organize the first Methodist church. He is also associated with the founding of Blendon Young Men's Seminary, which was acquired by Otterbein College, an institution with enrollment open to African Americans and women from its inception in 1847. He and his sons were all noted abolitionists who, along with Bishop William Hanby and Otterbein president Lewis Davis, assisted southern slaves on their road to freedom. From the Sharp homes, slaves would have proceeded north to the house of Samuel Patterson on Africa Road and along Alum Creek to the Quaker settlement near Marengo in Morrow County.

Garrit Sharp's home at 259 N. State Street, built in 1849, served as a Westerville meeting place. His son Stephen, a teacher and justice of the peace, resided in the stately home at 8025 Africa Road, built in 1857-58. The home's construction is representative of mid-nineteenth century rural architecture in Delaware County and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Another of Garrit's sons, Joseph, resided at 8216 Africa Road (circa 1843), also known as Yarnell's Farm. Son Garry built a house (circa 1857) on the current property of St. Paul's Catholic Church on N. State Street; however, the house was demolished in 2001."

Source: [1] Currently: "Page not found"

References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Lincoln Street Cemetery, in Find A Grave.

    Garrit Sharp
    Tombstone gives no date of birth.

  2. Dutch Reformed Church (Schaghticoke, New York). Schaghticoke Dutch Reformed Church records. (Salt Lake City, Utah: Genealogical Society of Utah, 1941).

    Parents' name: Scherp, Cornelius and Maria Van Bommel
    Child's name: Gerret
    Child's birth: 27 Dec 1776
    Baptism: none recorded
    Witnesses/Sponsors: none recorded