A History of the County of Westchester, Vol. I — Passage 104
[Robert Bolton, Jr. (1848)] Friends Fellow citizens and Soldiers \ ' '. • ^ ^. We have assembled on an interesting occasion, a solemn, not a melancholy one. We have come to this spot, to discharge a part of our duty, to one who has paid the debt of nature, to bring with us, as it were, each a stone from our quarries, fitted and prepared to build a monumental pile to a departed patriot, one who fell not in the hour of battle, contending for our liberties, but who lived to see our country prosperous and happy, delivered from all her troubles, The present General Aaron Ward, of Sing Sing. 238 HISTORY OF THE and then gathered like a shock of corn ripe for the harvest. It might be asked, if insensible dust and ashes can be benefitted by monumental honors ? No I But it is the duty of the living to make and preserve memorials of the virtuous and distinguished dead; for these memorials contain lessons of in-struction that are constantly before our eyes. The man to whose memory we are now erecting a tomb stone, was one of us, a citizen of Westchester county; his name requires no lineal honors, no