Boston’s historic cemeteries

See recent posts by Alan Maltzman

King’s Chapel Burial Ground in Boston

Hotels in this story

Boston is one of the earliest settlements in America and, of course, folks have been dying here since day one. As a result, the city has four cemeteries worthy of the most picky history nut.

The oldest cemetery was created the same year Boston was founded, 1630, so it houses its oldest settlers. King’s Chapel Burial Ground is, as the name implies, next to King’s Chapel but actually predates the church by many decades. It was originally just called The Old Burial Place. Famous occupants include John Winthrop, first Puritan Governor of Massachusetts; William Dawes, the real first arrival in Lexington and Concord on that famous ride in 1775; and Mary Chilton, the first European woman to step ashore in New England. It’s located at the corner of Tremont and School Streets, across from the Omni Parker House hotel.

The Central Burial Ground is probably the least well-known cemetery in the city. People were buried in the cemetery from 1755 to at least the mid 1800s. Many of the graves were unmarked and many British soldiers were buried here after the Battle of Bunker Hill. Artist Gilbert Stuart is probably the most famous occupant here. It’s on the southeast corner of Boston Common, near the intersection of Boylston and Tremont Streets.

Named after shoemaker William Copp, Copp’s Hill Burying Ground on Hull Street is the final resting place of more everyday folks who lived in the North End, including Boston’s early black community. Located on a hill on which a windmill once stood, Copp’s Hill was Boston’s largest colonial burying ground, dating from 1659. Some of the more famous folks buried here include Cotton Mather and his father, Increase, both Puritan ministers closely associated with the Salem witch trials, and Robert Newman, sexton of the Old North Church who hung the lanterns on the night of Paul Revere’s midnight ride. Because of its height, the British used the cemetery as a vantage point to fire their cannons on Charlestown during the Battle of Bunker Hill in 1775.

The most famous colonial cemetery isThe Old Granary, named after an old grain storage facility that once stood next door to it. Established in 1660, it became the final resting place of Boston’s rich and famous, including Paul Revere, John Hancock, Benjamin Franklin’s family, Mary Goose (believed by some to be Mother Goose), Sam Adams, Crispus Attucks, and Peter Faneuil. It’s located on Tremont Street, near the corner of Park Street.

– Alan Maltzman of BostonCityWalks.com

All products are independently selected by our writers and editors. If you buy something through our links, Oyster may earn an affiliate commission.