Howard Street Cemetery: Difference between revisions

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*[http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~macsalem/HowardStreetCemetery.htm Howard Street Cemetery] Rootsweb
*[http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~macsalem/HowardStreetCemetery.htm Howard Street Cemetery] Rootsweb
*[http://innopac.noblenet.org/record=b1967953~S24 Howard Street Cemetery Inscriptions, 1801-1852] by Jeanne Stella


*"Volunteer catalogs obscure Salem cemetery", ''Salem Evening News'', Aug. 30, 2000. p. A1
*"Volunteer catalogs obscure Salem cemetery", ''Salem Evening News'', Aug. 30, 2000. p. A1
*[http://innopac.noblenet.org/search?/Xstella%2C+jeanne&searchscope=24&m=&SORT=D/Xstella%252C+jeanne&searchscope=24&m=&SORT=D&search=stella%252C+jeanne&SUBKEY=stella%252C%20jeanne/1%2C11%2C11%2CB/frameset&FF=Xstella%252C+jeanne&searchscope=24&m=&SORT=D&8%2C8%2C Howard Street Cemetery Inscriptions, 1801-1852] by Jeanne Stella.
 


[[Category: Browse Index]]
[[Category: Browse Index]]
[[Category: Cemeteries]]
[[Category: Cemeteries]]

Revision as of 10:47, 24 September 2010

The Howard Street cemetery, established in 1801, is located next to the old Salem Jail in downtown Salem. Some of the famous people buried there are Col. Samuel Carlton, who was with Washington at Valley Forge, and William Browne, commander of the ship Brutus, which went down in a shipwreck off Cape Cod. There are also five Revolutionary War soldiers and 17 sea captains buried there. The last person buried there was in 1953.

See Also

  • Salem Room Vertical File - Cemeteries
  • "Volunteer catalogs obscure Salem cemetery", Salem Evening News, Aug. 30, 2000. p. A1