Grove Street Cemetery

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Grove Street Cemetery
(U.S. National Historic Landmark)
The Egyptian Revival entry gateway
The Egyptian Revival entry gateway
Location: New Haven, Connecticut
Area: 18 acres
Built/Founded: 1796
Architect: Augur, Hezekiah; Austin, Henry
Architectural style(s): Egyptian Revival, Gothic Revival
Designated as NHL: February 16, 20001
Added to NRHP: August 08, 19972
NRHP Reference#: 97000830
Governing body: Private

Grove Street Cemetery or Grove Street Burial Ground in New Haven, Connecticut is located in the center of the Yale University campus. It was organized in 1796 as the New Haven Burying Ground and incorporated in October 1797 to replace the crowded burial ground on the New Haven Green. It was one of the earliest burial grounds to be laid out with plots permanently owned by individual families. Many Yale presidents and New Haven politicians are buried here, as is Roger Sherman, the first mayor of New Haven and a signer of the Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, and U.S. Constitution.

Initially consisting of six acres (24,000 m²), it has been expanded to nearly 18 acres (73,000 m²). The entrance on Grove Street is a brownstone Egyptian Revival gateway, designed by Henry Austin, and built in 1845. The lintel of the gateway is inscribed "The Dead Shall Be Raised." The concluding period has been called the most eloquent and sublime piece of punctuation in stone. The quotation is a reference to 1 Corinthians 15.52: "in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we will be changed." The oft-recounted (and likely apocryphal) response of many presidents of Yale is, in substance, "They certainly will be, if Yale needs the property."

Immediately inside the gate is a Victorian chapel, now used as an office. The perimeter of the cemetery was surrounded by an eight foot (2.4 m) stone wall in 1848-49.

The gravestones from the New Haven Green (but not the remains) were moved here for preservation in 1821 and are displayed against the walls of the cemetery.

The Grove Street Cemetery was designated a National Historic Landmark by the United States Secretary of the Interior in 2000.134

It is managed by Camco Cemetery Management.

Notable burials

Monument to Glenn Miller
South side of Eli Whitney monument
  • James Kingsley (1778-1852)—professor of Hebrew, Greek and Ecclesiastical History at Yale.
  • John Gamble Kirkwood (1907-1959)—chemist.
  • Charlton Miner Lewis (1866-1923)—Yale professor and author.
  • Elias Loomis (1811-1889)—mathematician and astronomer.
  • Daniel Lyman (1718-1788)—Surveyor, Deputy to the General Court, Court Referee, Justice of the Peace and caretaker of the State's public records.
  • Samuel Mansfield (1717-1775)—first sheriff of New Haven
  • Othniel Charles Marsh (1831-1899)—paleontologist.
  • Henry Czar Merwin (1839-1863)—Civil War Union Army Officer killed at the Battle of Gettysburg
  • Glenn Miller (Alton G. Miller) cenotaph -- (1904-1944)—Jazz bandleader, trombonist.
  • Dr. Timothy Mix (1711-1779)—Colonial soldier who died on a British prison ship.
  • Jedidiah Morse (1761-1826)—clergy, "Father of American Geography". Father of Samuel F. B. Morse.
  • Theodore T. Munger (1830-1910)—clergyman.
North side of Eli Whitney monument
Grave of Noah Webster
  • Alfred Howe Terry (1827- 1890)—Civil War Union Army Major General.
  • Ithiel Town (1784-June 12, 1844)—architect and civil engineer. Inventor of the lattice truss bridge.
  • Martha Townsend (1753-1797)—first interment in Grove Street Cemetery
  • William Kneeland Townsend (1849-1907)—jurist
  • Henry H. Townshend (1874-1953)—proprietor and historian of Grove Street Cemetery.
  • Timothy Trowbridge (1631-1734)—merchant, soldier and politician.
  • Alexander C. Twining (1801-1884)—inventor of first practical artificial ice system.
  • Noah Webster (1758-1843)—lexicographer, dictionary publisher.
  • Nathan Whiting—soldier, Colonel in the Seven Years' War.
  • Eli Whitney (1765- 1825)—inventor of the cotton gin.
  • Theodore Winthrop (1828-1861)—Major, United States Army. First New Haven victim of the Civil War.
  • Melancthon Taylor Woolsey (1717-1758)—colonel in the Colonial Army.
  • Theodore Dwight Woolsey (1812-1889)—abolitionist, President of Yale.
  • David Wooster (1711-1777)—Buried in Danbury, Connecticut but memorialized at Grove Street Cemetery.5 Major General, 7th in rank below Washington. Killed in action.
  • Mary Clabaugh Wright (1917-1970)—educator and historian, first woman to become a full professor at Yale.

References

  1. ^ a b "Grove Street Cemetery". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Retrieved on 2007-10-03.
  2. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2007-01-23).
  3. ^ "http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Text/97000830.pdf "Grove Street Cemetery / New Haven City Burial Ground", September 29, 1999, by Bruce Clouette]PDF (142 KiB) National Historic Landmark Nomination]". National Park Service (1999-09-29).
  4. ^ "http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Photos/97000830.pdf Grove Street Cemetery / New Haven City Burial Ground--Accompanying 32 photos, from 1997 and undated.]PDF (5.03 MiB) National Historic Landmark Nomination]". National Park Service (1999-09-29).
  5. ^ The Grove Street Bulletin, vol. 1, no. 4, 2005

External links


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  • This page was last modified on 16 October 2008, at 14:34.

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