he subject of this sketch belonged to one
of the first families settling in this section. Her grandparents,
Ebenezer and Olive Osborne Landers, settled on the Homestead on
the East Side in March, 1787, coming to Afton, then known as
South Bainbridge, from Lenox, Mass. Here her father Solomon
Landers was born and after his marriage in 1830 to Elizabeth
Carpenter, always lived. Ebenezer Landers was a private in the
Revolutionary war, being granted a pension of $70 per annum for
his services in behalf of the new nation. Margaret C. Landers was
born May 7, 1843 and died May 26, 1921, being 78 years and 19
days old at her death. She was one of seven children all of whom
have passed on but Sarah C. Miss Landers spent her entire life
excepting six years when in California, on the home place. Of a
kindly and genial nature she made and retained a host of friends
and those who knew her best have many beautiful pictures to hang
on memory’s wall. Ailing for six years she was a patient
sufferer and was tenderly administered to by her sister and
nephew. She was a member of the D. A. R. and greatly interested
in it’s activities. Beside her sister she is survived by one
niece, Mrs. W. V. Cowden of Watervliet and three nephews, Geo. K.
Landers of Washington, D. C., Chas. J. Austin of New Rochelle, N.
Y. and Arthur I. Fisher of Afton. The funeral was held from her
late home Saturday, May 28 at 2 p.m., Rev. Chas. Petty of
Binghampton Universalist Church officiating and burial was in the
family plot on the East side. M. G. Hill, H. G. Carr, Zenas
Tarble, Stowell Green, Chester Corbin and James Hyde acted
bearers. The casket was covered with beautiful flowers, of which
in life she was so fond, mutely testifying to the love and esteem
in which she was held. [Obituary in Afton Enterprise, 9
Jun 1921]