Joseph Saunders was a farmer.
Marriage Notes for William Henry Haskell and Sarah Billings Buckminster
MARRIAGE: It appears in the town records that intentions to marry were accepted twice for William Haskell and Sarah Buckminster: 9 July 1852 and 19 Aug 1853.
Ephraim T. Marshall was a master mariner.
According to one account, Charles Milton Haskell is buried in Sailors Snug Harbor Cemetery.
The following is the entry for Sailors Snug Harbor from The Graveyard Shift: A Family Historians Guide to New York City Cemeteries, by Carolee Inskeep.
Sailor's Snug Harbor Cemetery
Category: Institutional, SeamenYears of Use: 1834 to 1976
Location: Prospect Avenue and Caldera Place, Livingston, Staten Island.
History: Sailors Snug Harbor was created in 1801 by the will of Captain Robert Richard Randall as a "home for retired, native-born sailors who served at least five years aboard a vessel flying the American flag." The Staten Island site opened in 1833 with twenty sailors. It later housed as many as 1,000 retirees at a time. In 1976, Sailors Snug Harbor closed its Staten Island facility, sold the property to the City of New York, and reopened its doors in North Carolina. It retained ownership of the cemetery, and the older gravestones were put into storage.
The Snug Harbor Cultural Center currently occupies the remaining property. It is home to the Staten Island Botanical Garden, the Staten Island Childrens Museum, and independent arts organizations.