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North Burial Ground

American historic place in Rhode Island, built 1700


American historic place in Rhode Island, built 1700

FieldValue
nameNorth Burial Ground
imageNorth Burial Ground Providence RI with trees and gravestones.jpg
locationProvidence, Rhode Island
locmapinRhode Island#USA
built1700
addedSeptember 13, 1977
refnum77000003
<ref name"nris"
Note

the cemetery in Rhode Island

The North Burial Ground is a 110 acre cemetery in Providence, Rhode Island dating to 1700, the first public cemetery in Providence. It is located north of downtown Providence, bounded by North Main Street, Branch Avenue, the Moshassuck River, and Cemetery Street. Its main entrance is at the junction of Branch and North Main. The burial ground is one of the larger municipal cemeteries in Southern New England, and it accepts 220 to 225 burials per year.

History

From the time of its founding by Roger Williams in 1636, Rhode Island had strict separation of religious and government institutions. Therefore, Providence had no state churches with adjacent public burial grounds, as most New England towns had. Instead, townspeople buried their dead in family plots on individual farms.

In 1700, a town vote was held to establish a municipal cemetery. This cemetery was to be open to the deceased of all faiths, from millionaires to paupers, and even emancipated slaves. 45 acres were set aside; 10 acres were to be used for a cemetery, the remainder for a town common and militia training ground. However, the first official burial didn't take place until one Samuel Whipple was buried here in 1710/11. There were only about one or two burials per year until 1736, when 14 people were buried.

By the mid-1800s, under the influence of the Rural Cemetery Movement, cemeteries generally became viewed as a place for the general public to enjoy refined outdoor recreation. In Providence, the North Burial Ground was further landscaped. More land was added, along with curving roads and trees, to make the grounds more attractive to the living.

Notable interments

See also:

North Burial Ground has the burials of many notable Rhode Island residents, including governors, members of Congress, soldiers, millionaires, emancipated slaves, and literary figures: • The article must mention how they are associated with the cemetery. • The fact of their association should have a reliable source cited. • Alphabetical by last name please • All others will be deleted without further explanation END OF NOTICE * * * * * * * * * * * * END OF NOTICE * * * * * * * * * * * *END OF NOTICE --

  • Daniel Abbott, deputy governor of Rhode Island colony
  • Philip Allen, Governor of Rhode Island and U.S. Senator
  • Zachariah Allen, prominent Providence mill owner and civic leader
  • William B. Avery, Medal of Honor recipient
  • Edward Mitchell Bannister, Canadian African-American painter, educator
  • Chad Brown, early pastor of the First Baptist Church in America, progenitor of Brown family
  • John Brown, merchant, U.S. Representative, slave trader, co-founder of Brown University
  • John Nicholas Brown II, socialite and philanthropist
  • Nicholas Brown, Jr., philanthropist and namesake of Brown University
  • Kady Brownell, Civil War veteran
  • Tristam Burgess, U.S. representative
  • Esek Hopkins, The only chief of the Continental Navy during the Revolutionary War
  • Jonathan Chace, U.S. senator
  • John Hopkins Clark, U.S. senator
  • Nicholas Cooke, governor of colony and state of Rhode Island during American Revolutionary War
  • Fred Corey, Major League Baseball player
  • Charles Dow, journalist, co-founder of Dow Jones & Company and founder of The Wall Street Journal
  • Samuel Eddy, U.S. representative and Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court.
  • Arthur Fenner, Governor of Rhode Island from 1790 to 1805.
  • James Fenner, U.S. senator from 1805 to 1807, Rhode Island governor from 1807 to 1811, 1824 to 1831 and 1843 to 1845
  • Sam Walter Foss, librarian, poet
  • John Brown Francis, governor and U.S. senator
  • William Goddard (U.S. patriot/publisher), American Revolutionary War printer
  • Stephen Hopkins, colonial governor, founding father, signatory of the Declaration of Independence
  • Jeremiah Brown Howell, U.S. senator
  • Richard Jackson, U.S. representative
  • Horace Mann, educator, U.S. representative, and first president of Antioch College
  • James Manning, delegate to the Confederation Congress
  • Albert Martin (soldier) (memorial), soldier, only Rhode Islander to have fought at the Battle of the Alamo.
  • Charles J. Martin, artist and arts instructor
  • James B. Mason, U.S. representative
  • Peter Mawney, colonel of Providence militia
  • Augustus S. Miller (1847–1905), Mayor of Providence 1903–1905.
  • Angela O'Leary, American artist and ghost of Providence's Fleur-De-Lys Studios
  • Annie Smith Peck, pioneering woman mountaineer
  • Saunders Pitman, silversmith.
  • Darius Sessions, deputy governor of Rhode Island colony
  • James F. Simmons, U.S. senator
  • Henry J. Steere, philanthropist and manufacturer
  • Joseph L. Tillinghast, U.S. representative
  • Sarah Helen Whitman, poet, essayist, and a romantic interest of Edgar Allan Poe

Images

Image:North Burial Ground.JPG|Early 1900s postcard of North Burial Ground File:North Burial Ground.entry&view.20110721.jpg|Entry flag and marker to North Burial Ground File:Dexter.family.grave stone.No Bur Gnd.20110722.jpg|Dexter family monument with governor's flags for Gregory Dexter, colonial President File:Hopkins.Stephen.grave site.No Bur Gnd.20110722.jpg|Grave monument for Governor Stephen Hopkins, signer of the Declaration of Independence File:Hopkins.Stephen.grave plaque.No Bur Gnd.20110722.jpg|Grave plaque for Governor Stephen Hopkins File:Hopkins.Sarah.DAR plaque.No Bur Gnd.20110722.jpg|DAR grave plaque for Sarah Hopkins, wife of Governor Stephen Hopkins File:Cooke.Nicholas.grave stone.North Bur Gnd.20110721.jpg|Governor Nicholas Cooke grave monument File:Cooke.Nicholas.grave medallion.North Bur Gnd.20110721.jpg|Nicholas Cooke governor's medallion File:Fenner.James.mausoleum.No Bur Gnd.20110722.jpg|Governor James Fenner mausoleum File:Fenner.James.grave medallion.No Bur Gnd.20110722.jpg|James Fenner governor's medallion File:Whipple.John.Sr.gravestone.NoBurGnd.Prov.jpg|John Whipple, early Providence settler whose remains were moved here from a family plot File:North Burial Ground, Providence.jpg|Flags fly over the graves of veterans at the North Burial Ground File:Grave of Pardon Sheldon.jpg|Grave of Capt. Pardon Sheldon, patriot involved in the Gaspee Affair

References

References

  1. {{NRISref. 2007a
  2. Rogak, Lisa. (2004). "Stones and Bones of New England: A Guide to Unusual, Historic, and Otherwise Notable Cemeteries". Globe Pequot.
  3. (24 Jan 2015). "Providence's North Burial Ground is running out of room". The Providence Journal.
  4. "Allen, Philip, (1785–1865)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  5. Perry, Amos. (1883). "Memorial of Zachariah Allen: 1795–1882". J. Wilson and son.
  6. Russo, Amy. (March 6, 2024). "A bronze plaque was stolen from Edward Bannister's grave. Now, there's a reward for its return.". [[The Providence Journal]].
  7. [http://www.ric.edu/northburialground/tours_revolutionary-hopkinsstephen.html Rhode Island College]
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