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St Luke's Anglican Cemetery, Burlington, Halton, Ontario, Canada

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  • Catherine M. Kerr (1848 - 1914)
    Daughter of Dr. John W. and Olivia Hunter Married Captain William John Simcoe Kerr on July 28, 1870 Their daughter: Sarah Ann Kerr Turner Black Inscription on stone: "In loving memory of W J Si...
  • Captain William John Simcoe Kerr (1837 - 1875)
    Mohawk/Turtle Clan Tekarihogea, hereditary chief of the Mohawk [one of the last such chiefs of the Iroquois (Haudenosaunee)] Maternal grandparents: Chief Joseph Brant, Thayendanegea of the Six Nat...
  • Elizabeth Kerr (1796 - 1845)
    Mohawk/Turtle Clan Daughter of Chief Joseph Brant, Thayendanegea of the Six Nations Married Captain William Johnson Kerr, 1828 Their children: James Kerr, Walter Butler Kerr, Joseph Bryant Winn...

St Luke's Anglican Cemetery resides in Burlington, Halton, Ontario, Canada. The earliest burials are from the 1830s and continue through 2020. This small cemetery is attached to the Parish Church of St Luke.

"The Parish Church of St Luke has been a place of worship for Anglicans in Halton since 1834. It is the oldest church in Burlington.

The land originally belonged to Mohawk Chief Joseph Brant who had been given it in recognition of his loyalty through the French Wars and the American Revolution. He had become an Anglican and after his death, his daughter Elizabeth Kerr donated 3 acres of his land for a church and cemetery. Elizabeth Kerr and her husband William were buried at St Luke's cemetery in 1845.

St Luke's church was completed in the fall of 1834 and consecrated in 1838. The cemetery is situated around the church. Joseph Brant's body was interred there until 1850 when it was removed to the Mohawk village on the Grand River. Of special historical significance are graves of early settlers, such as Augustus Bates, the first white child to be born in Nelson Township. There is also the Fergusson family plot, enclosed wtih iron railings, where the Honorable A J Fergusson Blair, first Privy Council President of the Dominion of Canada, is interred.

St Luke's Church office has copies of Anglican burial lists from 1838 (the originals are at McMaster University in Hamilton, ON). However, the early lists up to November of 1868 do not state place of interment."
https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/2472961/st.-luke's-anglican-church-cemetery