Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery

Historic burial grounds in Rhode Island, US
United States historic place
Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery
Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery is located in Rhode Island
Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery
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Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery is located in the United States
Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery
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LocationNewport, Rhode Island, U.S.
Area31 acres (13 ha)
Built1640
Architectural styleBeaux Arts, Romanesque
Websitewww.islandcemeterynewport.com
NRHP reference No.74000044[1]
Added to NRHPMay 1, 1974

The Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery are a pair of separate cemeteries on Farewell and Warner Street in Newport, Rhode Island. Together they contain over 5,000 graves, including a colonial-era slave cemetery and Jewish graves. The pair of cemeteries was added to the National Register of Historic Places as a single listing in 1974.[1]

History

God's Little Acre

The Common Burial Ground was established in 1640 on land given to city of Newport by John Clarke.[2] It features what is probably the largest number of colonial era headstones in a single cemetery, including the largest number of colonial African American headstones in the United States. The predominantly African-American northern section of the cemetery is commonly referred to by local African-Americans as "God's Little Acre".

The Island Cemetery was established by the city in 1836, and transferred to the private Island Cemetery Corporation in 1848.[2] Many members of Newport's most prominent families have been buried there over the years. Notable people buried there include Medal of Honor recipient Hazard Stevens, Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry, Commodore Matthew C. Perry and financier August Belmont.

Grave markers returned

In 2016, three gravestones were discovered which had been lost for years. One stone, found in Pennsylvania, was a 12 x 24 marker for a 1-year-old child. The others were 1835 stones for a Newport woman, which were found in a Newport yard during a renovation. The recovered stones were reset in the Common Burying Ground in 2016 by the Newport Historic Cemetery Advisory Commission.[3]

In 2017, two more burial stones found in Pennsylvania, those of Violet and Duchess Quamino, were returned and restored.[4] Duchess Quamino, a free Black woman formerly enslaved to William Ellery Channing, had been an active member of Newport's African community.[4]

Notable burials

Prominent people buried in the Common Burial Ground

  • John Howard Benson - Artist and stone carver.
  • John Linscom Boss Jr. – United States Representative.
  • Christopher Champlin – First Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Rhode Island.
  • Christopher G. Champlin – United States Representative 1797–1801, United States Senator 1809–11.
  • Michele Felice Cornè – Painter.
  • John Cranston – Colonial Governor of Rhode Island.
  • Samuel Cranston – Colonial Governor of Rhode Island.
  • William Ellery – Signer of the Declaration of Independence and colonial Deputy Governor.
  • James Franklin – Printer and brother of Benjamin Franklin.
  • Ann Smith Franklin – Printer & publisher, wife/widow of James Franklin (1st woman U.S. newspaper editor)
  • Prince Greene - Enslaved African-American who served as a soldier in the American Revolution.
  • Ida Lewis (lighthouse keeper) – Heroine of the 19th Century. Recipient of the Gold Lifesaving Medal.
  • Henry Marchant – Delegate to the Continental Congress.
  • Dutee J. Pearce – United States Representative.
  • Peter Quire – African-American leader and founder of St. John's Episcopal Church in Newport.
  • Duchess Quamino (1739–1804), a formerly enslaved woman, known as the "Pastry Queen of Rhode Island[4]
  • Asher Robbins – United States Senator 1825–39.
  • Zingo Stevens - Enslaved stone carver.
  • Gilbert Stuart – Portrait artist, is not buried here, but is honored on the monument above his wife's grave. (cenotaph)
  • Jane Stuart - First woman portrait artist in Newport, and daughter of Gilbert Stuart. Her mother and a few of her sisters are buried there, too.
  • William Greene Turner – Sculptor, perhaps best known for his statue of Oliver Hazard Perry in Newport.
  • Frances (Latham) Vaughan – "The Mother of Governors," widow to colonial President Jeremy Clarke, and mother of colonial governor Walter Clarke.
  • William Vernon – Colonial era merchant.
  • Richard Ward – Colonial governor of Rhode Island.
  • Samuel Ward – Delegate to Continental Congress and colonial Governor of Rhode Island.

Prominent people buried in the Island Cemetery

Images

Common Burial Ground

Island Cemetery

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery.

References

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ a b "NRHP nomination for Common Burying Ground and Island Cemetery" (PDF). Rhode Island Preservation. Retrieved 2014-11-05.
  3. ^ "Centuries-old gravestones found, returned to cemetery". 7 News Boston. Sunbeam Television Corp. 26 October 2016. Retrieved 14 January 2017.
  4. ^ a b c Belmore, Ryan (14 May 2017). "Duchess and Violet Quamino Gravestones Return to Newport's Common Burying Ground". Archived from the original on 8 March 2022. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Island Cemetery". RIP Newport. Newport, Rhode Island. Archived from the original on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 29 March 2022.

External links

  • Island Cemetery website
  • Colonial Slave Cemetery information
  • Common Burying Ground, a.k.a. Rhode Island Historical Cemetery Newport #3 at Find a Grave
  • Island Cemetery, a.k.a. Island Cemetery Annex, Rhode Island Historical Cemetery Newport #1, Rhode Island Historical Cemetery Newport #2 at Find a Grave
  • History of Newport County, Rhode Island," ed. Richard M. Bayles, NY, 1888 (description of common cemetery)

41°29′47″N 71°18′56″W / 41.49639°N 71.31556°W / 41.49639; -71.31556

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