
Notice the Dritt name on the broken tombstone at the historic Dritt cemetery in the new York County (Pa.) Native Lands County Park recently. Those are the hands of Paul Nevin, one of the cleanup crew members. (See related photo below.) Background posts: 400 years ago, John Smith explored Chesapeake Bay and For years, York countians have eyed amazing, destructive Susquehanna River ice jams and Petroglyphs, American Indian carvings, almost forgotten treasure.
After months of rancor surrounding the Lauxmont Farms controversy, it was intriguing to see a recent example of productive peace in a park that the episode spun off.
Last weekend, local Native Americans weeded an overgrown cemetery on land that is now part of York County's Native Lands County Park.
That was the cemetery for the Dritt family, an old-time local family that hasn't been able to muster such a clean-up effort in recent years.
The park is home to more than the Dritt cemetery.
It contains the site of the last Susquehannock Indian village and cemeteries that would have resulted from such a settlement... .








