• Source: Hope Cemetery (Worcester, Massachusetts)
    • Hope Cemetery is an historic rural cemetery at 119 Webster Street in Worcester, Massachusetts. Established in 1854, it was the city's sixth public cemetery, and is the burial site of remains originally interred at its first five cemeteries. Its landscaping and funerary art are examplars of the rural cemetery movement, and the cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997. The cemetery occupies 168 acres (68 ha).


      Description and history


      Hope Cemetery is located in far southern Worcester, atop a rise known as Webster Hill, which has commanding views to the north and east, including the campuses of Clark University and the College of the Holy Cross. The cemetery was laid out, probably by a landscape designer (although none has been identified), in the rural cemetery style, with winding lanes that take advantage of the terrain. It also includes horticultural plantings of note, another hallmark of the rural cemetery style, including several distinguished specimens of beech, Norway maple, sugar maple, cedar, ash, and oak trees.
      Worcester's first burying ground was located at Thomas and Summer Streets, and was established in 1713, and had seventeen graves marked by stone mounds, and the second burying ground, located on the Worcester Common, had more than 100 burials, all of which were relocated here in the 20th century. The third burying ground, Raccoon Plain, was a small cemetery with sixteen burials, all of which were reinterred here in 1857. The fourth burying ground, at Mechanic Street, had more than 1000 burials, which were moved here in 1878–79. The Pine Meadow Burying Ground's 658 interments were relocated here between 1862 and 1878.


      Notable interments


      Agnes Ballard, architect, educator, one of the first women elected to office in Florida
      Elizabeth Bishop, poet
      Loring Coes, inventor of the Monkey wrench
      Abby Kelley Foster, 19th century social reformer and feminist
      Stephen Symonds Foster, radical abolitionist
      Robert Goddard, engineer, inventor of the first liquid-fueled rocket
      John Bartholomew Gough, temperance lecturer
      Iver Johnson, firearm, bicycle and motorcycle manufacturer
      Charles H. Pinkham, Medal of Honor recipient
      Thomas Plunkett, Medal of Honor recipient
      Capt. Peter Slater, youngest participant in the Boston Tea Party, fought in the American Revolution
      Amy Tanner, psychologist at Clark University
      Eli Thayer, Congressman
      Webster Thayer, trial judge in the Sacco and Vanzetti case


      See also


      National Register of Historic Places listings in southwestern Worcester, Massachusetts
      National Register of Historic Places listings in Worcester County, Massachusetts
      Rural Cemetery (Worcester, Massachusetts), a private rural cemetery


      References




      External links


      Media related to Hope Cemetery (Worcester, Massachusetts) at Wikimedia Commons

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