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70 Honor Ex-Slave Who Chose

‘Freedom’ As  His Adopted Name

Boy Scout Tim Simmons, Troop 9, Edmeston, plays taps this afternoon after a historical marker was unveiled honoring Cato Freedom at the Butternut Valley Cemetery, Town of Burlington, where he is buried.  A former slave from Norwich, Conn., he won his freedom for fighting with Gen. Ebenezer Huntington’s Continental troops during the American Revolution.  More than 70 local historians and history enthusiasts gathered today as Lee Fisher of the NAACP, Oneonta chapter, recounted what is known about the man who moved to Otsego County in 1816 with wife and two teenage daughters, buying 33 acres of land for $333.33.  While Hartwick College’s U.S. Colored Troops Institute has identified three blacks who moved to Central New York after fighting the British, Cato Freedom’s is the only gravesite identified so far.  Fisher is standing next to new marker, as it OCHA President Deb Mackenzie (maroon blouse).At right, Deb Rood of West Burlington pauses at Freedom’s gravestone after the ceremony, organized by the Otsego County Historical Association, the NAACP and the USCTI.  (Jim Kevlin/AllOTSEGO.com)

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Putting the Community Back Into the Newspaper

Now through March 30, new annual subscribers to “The Freeman’s Journal” and AllOtsego.com (or subscribers who have lapsed for two or more years) have an opportunity to help their choice of one of four Otsego County charitable organizations.

$5.00 of your subscription will be donated to the nonprofit of your choice:

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