Parks and Cemeteries in Andover: Difference between pages

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== History of Parks ==
The first documented gravestone in Andover was placed at South Church in 1711.
Andover has valued its parks for a long time. In 1897 Andover set up a Park Commission. The first project of the commission was saving trees in the Carmel Woods.  Shrubs and bushes were also planted.  But vandilsm in the park ended the beautification in 1933 project and trees were cut down and given to the poor.  


The second project of the commission was Richardson Field, which became Central Park. See entry below.


See
[https://preservation.mhl.org/chapel-cemetery '''Chapel Cemetery at Phillips Academy''']
*[http://andover.mvlc.org/opac/en-US/skin/default/xml/rdetail.xml?r=487303&t=ANDOVER%20CENTURY%20OF%20CHANGE&tp=keyword&d=0&hc=3&rt=keyword ''Andover a Century of Change:1896 - 1996''] by Eleanor Motley Richardson, (974.45 Ric), page 206.
*Originally the cemetery for the Andover Theological Seminary
**First burial was in 1810.
**Those buried include: Harriet Beecher Stowe; John Dove; Alice Buck; Elizabeth Stuart Phelps and Warren Draper.
***See "A little cemetery - a lot of history," ''Andover Townsman'', December 5, 2013, p. 16.


== Andover Park 2000 ==
Andover Park 2000, a project of Doherty Middle School, is located in Central Park on Bartlett Street.  It contains plaques of people significant in Andover history.


See
[http://www.christchurchandover.org/ '''Christ Church Cemetery''']
*Located at 25 Central Street.
*Graves in this cemetery date back to 1840.


* ''Andover Townsman'', June 22, 2000.


* Andover Vertical File, Andover Park 2000 booklet with timeline and tree names.
[https://preservation.mhl.org/112-gould-road '''Cornelius Gould Farm Cemetery''']
*Contains only three gravestones and a few unmarked graves: Cornelius Gould, Lydia Gould, and Emerson Gould.
*When the boundary line between Andover and North Reading was established in 1904, a portion of the Gould Farm was in North Reading.  The cemetery is in this portion.




== Castle Park ==
'''Jenkins Family Cemetery''' - See Woodbridge-Jenkins Family Cemetery
Castle Park is located on the banks of the Shawsheen River adjacent to the Marland Mill, now Atria Assisted-Living. The park cleanup, along with [[Wood Garden]] was a 350th celebration activity.  It was dedicated on September 29, 1996.
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See
* [http://134.241.121.88/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=11490T9973U33.20531&menu=search&aspect=subtab783&npp=25&ipp=20&spp=20&profile=man&ri=&term=&index=.GW&aspect=subtab783&term=&index=.AW&term=celebrating+350&index=.ET&term=&index=.SW&x=0&y=0#focus ''Celebrating 350 Years, Andover Massachusetts, 1996: An Anniversary Journal''], page 49 (974.45 Cel)
* Andover Townsman, "Castle Park to be Dedicated Next Weekend", page 23.


[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=640791 '''Phillips Academy Chapel Cemetery''']
*Located on Chapel Avenue.
*The burying ground of Andover Theological Seminary.


== The Park, also known as Central Park ==
In 1899 the Town of Andover purchased "Richardson Field" and a parcel of land from J.W. Berry for a park in the center of town.  Through the years it has been called "Central Park, The Common, and the Park with a Gazebo, but, according to the Andover Historical Society, the official name is just "The Park."


In 1906 Rodgers Brook was dammed to create a pond in the Park. The brook was diverted to an underground pipe running through downtown Andover in 1968.
[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=91539&CScntry=4&CSst=21&CScnty=1177&CSsr=281& '''Sacred Heart Cemetery''']
*Located at 80 Corbett Road in the Shawsheen section of Andover.
*A member of the Catholic Cemetery Association


The Bandstand in Central Park was originally constructed in 1913. According to Community Services Librarian, Norma Gammon, the design was changed in the 1980's.
[http://staugustineparish.org/church_home.html '''St. Augustine's Church Cemetery''']
*Located off Lupine Road; office at 43 Essex Street.
*Graves in this cemetery date back to 1855.


[[File:bandstand.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Bandstand in Central Park. This picture is from the Andover Townsman Centennial Issue, July 21, 1988, page 73A]]


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See
[https://www.northandoverhistoricalsociety.org/first-burying-ground '''First Burying Ground, North Parish''' North Andover Historical Society]
* [http://andover.mvlc.org/opac/en-US/skin/default/xml/rdetail.xml?r=6355&t=What%20it%20was%2C%20what%20it%20is%3A%20300th&tp=title&d=0&hc=1&rt=title Andover, ''What it was, what it is: 300th Anniversary May 30, - June 2, 1946''] published by the Andover Townsman Press.  
*[http://www.northparish.org/cemetery/church.html North Parish Burial Ground in North Andover]
*"A Park by Any Other Name", ''Townsman'' ("The Back Page") , December 29, 2005
*[http://hne-rs.s3.amazonaws.com/filestore/1/2/9/1/1_40bc7622deefd6a/12911_e6dfb13f33ac7fb.pdf The Old Burial Ground on Academy Road, North Andover]
*"Recalling high, low bandstand moments," ''Andover Townsman'', October 18, 2012, p. 10.




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[http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=91565 '''Saint Francis Seminary Cemetery''']


--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] 16:53, March 14, 2006 (EST)
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--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] ([[User talk:Eleanor|talk]]) 14:23, 22 October 2015 (EDT)


back to [[Main Page|Main Page]]
[http://www.southchurch.com/cemetery/index.html '''South Church Cemetery''']
[[Category:Andover Answers Index]]
*Located at the corner of Central and School Streets (41 Central Street).
*Oldest cemetery in Andover.
*First recorded burial was Robert Russell in 1710.
*The first two ministers, Rev. Samuel Philips and Rev. Jonathan French, and their families are buried here.  Also buried are the founders of Phillips Academy, Andover Theological Seminary and the Abbot Female Academy.
*Andover's Revolutionary War dead are buried here or remembered at the triangle of School and Central Streets.
*See [[South Church (Parish)]]
*[http://www.southchurch.com/cemetery/ List of people buried in South Church Cemetery]
[[File:southchurchmap.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Map of South Parish Cemetery]]
[[File:Memorial.jpg|200px|thumb|center|List of Memorials in South Parish Cemetery]]


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See
[https://www.andoverma.gov/309/Spring-Grove-Cemetery '''Spring Grove Cemetery''']
*Located on Abbot Street named for the spring on the property.
*This is the Andover town cemetery.
*Funds ($3,000) appropriated at the 1869 town meeting purchase 41 acres from the heirs of Nehemiah Abbott for the cemetery.
*Dedicated on October 15, 1871. 
*A statue dedicated to Civil War Veterans erected on cemetery grounds.
*An online search by name, a map of the cemetery, and a list of rules and regulations are located on the town's website [https://www.andoverma.gov/618/Spring-Grove-Cemetery-Viewer] 
*See "Spring Grove Cemetery steeped in History, Shrouded in Beauty", The Townsman, October 29, 2015, page 11.


*"Park's name splits townies, newcomers," ''Eagle Tribune'', November 28, 2005, page 1.
*Past and Present. ''Andover Townsman'', December 8, 2005.
*"'Andoverisms' punctuate local conversations," ''Andover Townsman'', November 21, 2013, p. 15.
*[http://andover.mvlc.org/opac/en-US/skin/default/xml/rdetail.xml?r=487303&t=ANDOVER%20CENTURY%20OF%20CHANGE&tp=keyword&d=0&hc=3&rt=keyword ''Andover a Century of Change:1896 - 1996''] by Eleanor Motley Richardson, page 2006 (974.45 Ric).


[[Image:park1.jpg|thumb||left|''Park's Name Splits Townies, Newcomers, Eagle Tribune '', November 28 , 2005, page 6 .....click to enlarge ]]
[https://www.jcam.org/Pages/Cemeteries/Cemetery_Pages/Lawrence_Mt_Vernon.html '''Temple Emanuel Cemetery''']
[[Image:park2.jpg|thumb||left|''Park's Name Splits Townies, Newcomers, Eagle Tribune '', November 28 , 2005, end of article .....click to enlarge ]]
**Located at Corbett and Mount Vernon Street, Lawrence




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[https://preservation.mhl.org/99-corbertt-street '''United Lebanese Cemetery''']
*First Syrian Cemetery in the United States. (see ''Legacies of Labor'')


== Penguin Park ==
*"Motley crew crafts new Andover playground," ''Boston Globe'', May 13, 1990, p. 1.




== Peter Aumais Park ==
[http://www.westparishgardencemetery.org/ '''West Parish Cemetery''']
The Andover High Varsity Baseball Park was dedicated in memory of Peter Aumais, 1976 team captain, on April, 26, 2000
*Located at 129 Reservation Road.
*Graves in this cemetery date back to 1692 & 1751.


*See


''Andover Townsman'', Thursday, March 23, 2000, page 39.  
*[https://preservation.mhl.org/4-douglass-ln '''Woodbridge-Jenkins Family Cemetery - Douglas Lane''']
**Located at 4 Douglas Lane, off Mortimer Road, off Jenkins Road.
**17 people were buried here between 1753-1882.
**In 1882, 8 members of the Jenkins family were reinterred, 7 to Spring Grove Cemetery (William Jenkins lot), 1 to South Church Cemetery.
**9 remain, 6 members of the Benjamin Woodbridge family (1805-1853, direct descendants of Rev. John Woodbridge, the first minister of Andover), and 3 children of Samuel and Rebecca Jenkins, who died on consecutive days in September 1753.
**The town adopted the cemetery at the 2002 town meeting.
**A 2003 Eagle Scout project cleaned up, restored, and fenced in the cemetery.
**A 2014 Eagle Scout project built a footbridge and footpath from the road to the cemetery.
[[Image:Jenkins.jpg|thumb|...Woodbridge and Jenkins Family Cemetery.... click to enlarge|left]]


Peter Aumais Park Dedicated. ''Andover Townsman'', May 4, 2000, page 44. 


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See


== Shawsheen River Park ==
*"Buried here (famous Andover residents)," ''Andover Townsman'', October 26, 1995, p. 1.
The Andover Rotary Club adopted the old bowling green ( part of the recreational facilities of the Balmoral Spa ).
*"Historic Undertaking: Repairing stones is grave matter," ''Andover Townsman'', February 21, 2002, p.1.
*[https://lebanesestudies.ncsu.edu/projects/lawrence.php Legacies of Labor Lebanese Factory Workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts]
*"Revolutionary War-era cemetery now town's," ''Andover Townsman'', April 25, 2002.
*"Revolutionary War era cemetery is town's: Woodbridge Jenkins Cemetery," ''Andover Townsman'', May 2, 2002, p. 22.
*[https://mvlc.ent.sirsi.net/client/en_US/andover/search/detailnonmodal/ent:$002f$002fSD_ILS$002f0$002fSD_ILS:380293/one "Farm and Neighborhood Cemeteries of Andover and North Andover, Mass, Including Stone Inscriptions"] by Lenora White McQuesten.
*"Finding roots in Andover," ''Eagle Tribune'', January 11, 2009, p. 9.
* "Bridging Town History: Eagle Scout candidate builds critical link to early cemetery," ''Andover Townsman'', September 11, 2014, p. 17.
* [http://magenweb.org/Essex/Andover/cemeteryindex.html Andover Church and Cemetery Guide]
*[File:JenkinscemeteryEagleTribune.pdf]




See also
== William Wood Memorial Park ==
See [[Wood Garden]]


*[https://archive.org/details/farmneighborhood00mcqu Farm and neighborhood cemeteries of Andover and North Andover, Massachusetts, including stone inscriptions]
* [https://mvlc.ent.sirsi.net/client/en_US/andover/search/detailnonmodal/ent:$002f$002fSD_ILS$002f0$002fSD_ILS:50527/one Guide to Cemeteries in Essex County Massachusetts] R929.5 Gui (The information for Andover is in the Andover File -- Cemeteries.)
*[http://andoverhistorical.org/ The Andover Historical Society] has a list of cemetery inventories for Christ Church, St. Augustine's, Phillips Academy Chapel, Spring Grove, South Church and West Parish cemeteries.


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--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] 14:49, May 31, 2006 (EDT)<br>
--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] 15:41, June 13, 2006 and December 2, 2014 (EDT)<br>
--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] 11:22, December 8, 2014 (EST)
--[[User:Kim|Kim]] 20:38, December 12, 2012 (EST)<br>
--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] ([[User talk:Eleanor|talk]]) 10:52, 18 March 2015 (EDT)<br>
--[[User:Kim|Kim]] ([[User talk:Kim|talk]]) 14:33, 3 February 2016 (EST)<br>
--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] ([[User talk:Eleanor|talk]]) 13:23, 12 February 2016 (EST)
----[[User:Stephanie|Stephanie]] ([[User talk:Stephanie|talk]]) 11:05, 19 October 2020 (EDT)


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back to [[Main Page|Main Page]]
[[Category:Andover Answers Index]]
[[Category:Andover Answers Index]]

Revision as of 09:33, 25 June 2021

The first documented gravestone in Andover was placed at South Church in 1711.


Chapel Cemetery at Phillips Academy

  • Originally the cemetery for the Andover Theological Seminary
    • First burial was in 1810.
    • Those buried include: Harriet Beecher Stowe; John Dove; Alice Buck; Elizabeth Stuart Phelps and Warren Draper.
      • See "A little cemetery - a lot of history," Andover Townsman, December 5, 2013, p. 16.


Christ Church Cemetery

  • Located at 25 Central Street.
  • Graves in this cemetery date back to 1840.


Cornelius Gould Farm Cemetery

  • Contains only three gravestones and a few unmarked graves: Cornelius Gould, Lydia Gould, and Emerson Gould.
  • When the boundary line between Andover and North Reading was established in 1904, a portion of the Gould Farm was in North Reading. The cemetery is in this portion.


Jenkins Family Cemetery - See Woodbridge-Jenkins Family Cemetery


Phillips Academy Chapel Cemetery

  • Located on Chapel Avenue.
  • The burying ground of Andover Theological Seminary.


Sacred Heart Cemetery

  • Located at 80 Corbett Road in the Shawsheen section of Andover.
  • A member of the Catholic Cemetery Association


St. Augustine's Church Cemetery

  • Located off Lupine Road; office at 43 Essex Street.
  • Graves in this cemetery date back to 1855.


First Burying Ground, North Parish North Andover Historical Society


Saint Francis Seminary Cemetery


South Church Cemetery

  • Located at the corner of Central and School Streets (41 Central Street).
  • Oldest cemetery in Andover.
  • First recorded burial was Robert Russell in 1710.
  • The first two ministers, Rev. Samuel Philips and Rev. Jonathan French, and their families are buried here. Also buried are the founders of Phillips Academy, Andover Theological Seminary and the Abbot Female Academy.
  • Andover's Revolutionary War dead are buried here or remembered at the triangle of School and Central Streets.
  • See South Church (Parish)
  • List of people buried in South Church Cemetery
Map of South Parish Cemetery
List of Memorials in South Parish Cemetery


Spring Grove Cemetery

  • Located on Abbot Street named for the spring on the property.
  • This is the Andover town cemetery.
  • Funds ($3,000) appropriated at the 1869 town meeting purchase 41 acres from the heirs of Nehemiah Abbott for the cemetery.
  • Dedicated on October 15, 1871.
  • A statue dedicated to Civil War Veterans erected on cemetery grounds.
  • An online search by name, a map of the cemetery, and a list of rules and regulations are located on the town's website [1]
  • See "Spring Grove Cemetery steeped in History, Shrouded in Beauty", The Townsman, October 29, 2015, page 11.


Temple Emanuel Cemetery

    • Located at Corbett and Mount Vernon Street, Lawrence


United Lebanese Cemetery

  • First Syrian Cemetery in the United States. (see Legacies of Labor)


West Parish Cemetery

  • Located at 129 Reservation Road.
  • Graves in this cemetery date back to 1692 & 1751.


  • Woodbridge-Jenkins Family Cemetery - Douglas Lane
    • Located at 4 Douglas Lane, off Mortimer Road, off Jenkins Road.
    • 17 people were buried here between 1753-1882.
    • In 1882, 8 members of the Jenkins family were reinterred, 7 to Spring Grove Cemetery (William Jenkins lot), 1 to South Church Cemetery.
    • 9 remain, 6 members of the Benjamin Woodbridge family (1805-1853, direct descendants of Rev. John Woodbridge, the first minister of Andover), and 3 children of Samuel and Rebecca Jenkins, who died on consecutive days in September 1753.
    • The town adopted the cemetery at the 2002 town meeting.
    • A 2003 Eagle Scout project cleaned up, restored, and fenced in the cemetery.
    • A 2014 Eagle Scout project built a footbridge and footpath from the road to the cemetery.
...Woodbridge and Jenkins Family Cemetery.... click to enlarge



See


See also


--Eleanor 15:41, June 13, 2006 and December 2, 2014 (EDT)
--Kim 20:38, December 12, 2012 (EST)
--Eleanor (talk) 10:52, 18 March 2015 (EDT)
--Kim (talk) 14:33, 3 February 2016 (EST)
--Eleanor (talk) 13:23, 12 February 2016 (EST)


Stephanie (talk) 11:05, 19 October 2020 (EDT)

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