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A
tragic incident occurred in 1954 with the death of a young boy in a
grain chute. According to an article in the “Mirror Recorder,”
Francis (“Pete”) Tryon, 12, fell into a grain bin while playing hide
and seek and suffocated. Dr. Francis D. Brown, acting coroner for
Delaware Co., issued a verdict of accidental death by asphyxiation.
The accident happened shortly after 7:30 p.m. in Robert Cowan’s
large white dairy barn on Pearl St. near Locust Hill cemetery and
Methodist church. The boy had been playing on the second floor of
the barn with his older brother, John J. Tryon, and two friends,
Frank Clark and George Many. According to reports young George
heard a cry for help, looked into the bin’s chute, and saw the Tryon
youngster’s foot sticking out.
John Jr. ran outside for help. His cries attracted neighbors,
George Stevens and Edward Kosier. With young Many, they released
the chute and pulled the boy out. Dr. Brown arrived immediately,
but he said “there was no hope; there was nothing that could be
done.”
Dr. Brown knew the Tryon family well. He had delivered the victim
at birth, and later removed his tonsils. Young Francis had just
entered seventh grade at S. Kortright Central School. He is shown
in a photograph on the headstone as a lively-looking lad with short
blond hair and a wide grin.
News of the tragedy spread quickly throughout Hobart. The boy’s
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Tryon Sr., went to the scene and
nearly collapsed. Dr. Brown gave them sedative.
   
Footnote:
According to the stones erected on the family graves in Locust Hill
Cemetery, young Francis’ parents both died in 1962. Two other
headstones at the family site mark the graves of two sons of
Francis’ older brother, John E. Tryon Jr. and his wife, the former
Alice DuBois. They are Michael J., who died the following
year at the age of two, and John Michael Tryon, born January 7,
1964, who lived only one day. The gravestones are unusual for the
Hobart cemetery in that they carry photographs of the deceased. In
addition to the one cited above, a photo of the lad’s father, John
E. Tryon (1911-1962) shows a slightly heavy man with a receding
hairline, while his wife, Lillian (1917-1962) is seen as an
attractive lady with a white lace dress and pearls. Michael is also
depicted, a chubby-cheeked blond toddler.
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