Harmony Grove Cemetery

{{Short description|Historic rural cemetery in Essex County, Massachusetts}}

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File:Joseph Peabody Monument Harmony Grove Cemetery.jpg

Harmony Grove Cemetery is a rural cemetery in Salem, Massachusetts. It was established in 1840 and is located at 30 Grove Street.{{cite web | url=http://salem.essexcountyma.net/HarmonyGroveCemetery.htm | title=Essexcountyma.net | access-date=2010-04-13 | archive-date=2016-03-03 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303214434/http://salem.essexcountyma.net/HarmonyGroveCemetery.htm | url-status=dead }} The cemetery is approximately 57 acres in size and was designed by Francis Peabody and Alexander Wadsworth.{{cite book |last1=Linden |first1=Blanche M.G. |title=Silent City on a Hill: Picturesque Landscapes of Memory and Boston's Mount Auburn Cemetery |date=2007 |publisher=University of Massachusetts Press |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |isbn=978-1-55849-571-5 |page=293 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AM-x8sYjQXcC&q=rural+cemetery |accessdate=4 August 2019}}

The cemetery includes the Gothic revival Blake Memorial Chapel of 1905.Chapel for Harmony Cemetery, Boston Globe, Mar 2, 1903

Notable burials

=Monuments=

There are several monuments in Harmony Grove.

  • Cannons given to the cemetery by the War Department in 1888. These were outmoded soon after the Civil War.
  • Monument for the family of Sarah Parker Remond (1826–1894), an American physician and abolitionist who was sister of Charles. Sarah was buried in Rome. Her father was John Remond.
  • Monument for Frederick Townsend Ward (1831–1862), an American mercenary, who was cremated and buried in China.
  • Monument for Stephen C. Phillips (1801–1857), Representative from Massachusetts

=Old burial ground=

An old burial ground, called Gardner Hill, was situated a little west of Harmony Grove.Gardner, Frank A MD [1907] Thomas Gardner Planter and Some of his Descendants Essex Institute, Salem, MA (via [https://books.google.com/books?id=k6hLAAAAMAAJ&dq=thomas+gardner+planter&pg=PA1 Google Books]) When the area of Boston Street and Grove was developed in the 1840s, one hundred fifty gravestones were moved from Gardner Hill to the cemetery. One of these was that of Thomas Gardner (1592–1674) who came to the area, from Cape Ann, with Roger Conant in 1626. The stones of Thomas' daughter, Seeth, and grandson, Abel, were also moved to Harmony Grove.Gardner, F.A. (1933) Gardner Memorial Newcomb & Gauss, Salem, pages 17, 18 (via [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89066147570;view=2up;seq=30 00Hathi Trust])

One of the stones moved from the old burial ground was for Robert Buffum who arrived in 1634, from Yoshire, England, and was buried in 1669. His is the oldest grave (stones - his remains are not there) in Harmony Grove.

Sources

  • Harmony Grove Cemetery (Salem, Mass.: Whipple and Smith, 1866)
  • Harmony Grove Cemetery (Salem, Mass) - brochure (2010)

References