An interment not at http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nytigs/NailFactoryCemetery/NailFactoryCemeteryIntro.htm > DIED. > In this village, of Consumption, Feb. 20th, 1875 Mrs. Rebecca COLE PRIMMER, mother of Mr. John Primmer, of this village, aged 73 years. > -Her remains were taken to Troy for interment in the Nail Factory Cemetery. Oneonta Herald & Democrat http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/NYOTSEGO/2005-02/1107989874 http://theusgenweb.org/ny/otsego/vitals/oneontaherald11.html Also, it turns out Weise made an error regarding the conveyance of the cemetery: "The Sixth Ward Cemetery, on the hill-side west of Vandenburgh Avenue, near the Burden Iron Company’s upper works, is a small plat of ground, which was conveyed May 17, 1836, to the city by the Troy Nail Factory Company, to be used as a public burial ground for that part of the city." Weise, Arthur James. The City of Troy and Its Vicinity. Troy, NY: Edward Green, 1886. 55. http://books.google.com/books?id=J1wVAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA55&lpg=PA55 The conveyance isn’t to be found in the Troy Common Council Minutes for May 17, 1836 but rather March 17, 1836: > Mr. Alderman Ford presented a deed from the Nail factory Company for an acre of land in the Sixth Ward, to the Corporation of said City in Trust to be used as a public burial Ground for the Inhabitants of the Sixth Ward, & particularly for the use of persons imployed at or about the nail factory. > Resolved that the Common Council accept the said Trust, and that a certificate of such acceptance be verified under the Common Seal and the Signature of the Mayor. > Resolved that it be referred to the Standing Committee of the Public Burial Grounds to inquire & report what further improvements are necessary for the public Burial Ground located in the Sixth Ward of this City.