- Source: Rural Cemetery and Friends Cemetery
The Rural cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery and Friends cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery are a pair of connected cemeteries at 149 Dartmouth Street in New Bedford, Massachusetts United States. They occupy an irregular parcel of land more than 90 acres (36 ha) in size on the west side of the city. Established in 1837, the Rural cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery was the fifth rural cemetery" target="_blank">cemetery in the nation, after Mount Auburn cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery (Cambridge, Massachusetts), Mount Hope cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery (Bangor, Maine), Mount Pleasant cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery (Taunton, Massachusetts), and Laurel Hill cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). In its early days it was criticized as lacking some of the natural beauty afforded by rolling terrain; the early sections were laid out in rectilinear manner on relatively flat terrain. The cemetery" target="_blank">cemetery was a popular burial site, including notably the landscape artist Albert Bierstadt and Governor of Massachusetts John H. Clifford.
In contrast to the more decorative nature of the Rural cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery, the Friends cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery is much plainer. It consists of a roughly 2-acre (0.81 ha) parcel on one side of the Rural cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery, which was sold to the Dartmouth Friends in 1849, but is administered by the city. This section has less ornate markers, generally laid out in rectilinear fashion. It includes burials that were relocated from a Friends cemetery" target="_blank">cemetery (dating to 1793) that had been located on the New Bedford waterfront.
The cemeteries were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2014.
Notable burials
Charles S. Ashley (1858–1941) – Mayor of New Bedford
Charles James Barclay (1843–1909) – United States Navy officer
Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902) – German-American painter, see List of works by Albert Bierstadt
Jonathan Bourne (1811–1889) – New Bedford alderman and namesake of the town of Bourne, Massachusetts
Martha B. Briggs (1838–1889) – educator
John H. Clifford (1809–1876) – Massachusetts governor and attorney general
Jethro Coffin (1663–1727) – Jethro Coffin's House is the oldest residence on Nantucket still on its original site
Thomas Washburn Cook (1837–1920) – Massachusetts State Senator in 1889 and 1890
William W. Crapo (1830–1926) – member of the United States House of Representatives from Massachusetts
Alexander Du Bois (1803–1887) – grandfather of W. E. B. Du Bois
Robert Swain Gifford (1840–1905) – landscape painter
Captain Amos Haskins (1816–1861) – member of the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head, ship captain, whaler, and mariner
Hosea M. Knowlton (1847–1902) – lawyer, District Attorney, and Attorney General of Massachusetts
Charles S. Randall (1824–1904) – member of the United States House of Representatives from Massachusetts
Albert Pinkham Ryder (1847–1917) – tonalist painter
Howland H. Sargeant (1911–1984) – United States Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs and the president of Radio Liberty
Edwin P. Seaver (1838–1917) – educator who served as superintendent of Boston Public Schools from 1880 to 1904
William Allen Wall (1801–1885) – painter
See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in New Bedford, Massachusetts
References
External links
New Bedford Rural cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery
Rural cemetery" target="_blank">Cemetery at Find a Grave
Friends Burying Ground at Find a Grave
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Rural Cemetery and Friends Cemetery
- Albany Rural Cemetery
- Woodlawn Cemetery (Bronx, New York)
- Poughkeepsie Rural Cemetery
- Cemetery
- Laurel Hill Cemetery
- West Norwood Cemetery
- Forest Hills Cemetery
- Paddington Old Cemetery
- Kensal Green Cemetery