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Note:
The following is
the text of the
guide to The Old
Burying Ground that
hangs on the west
end of the Horsesheds
as you enter
the cemetery.
The
Old Burying Ground
In
the settlement
of early
towns provision
for a burying
ground was
of necessity
among the
first requirements.
Custom and
convenience
had it situated
close by
the church
and this
convention was
observed here
in Jaffrey..
The original
grant of
the township—at
first called
Middle Monadnock
No. 2—was
made in
1749 and
among the
stipulations
was “that
a good Convenient
Meeting House
be Built .
. . as near
the Centerof
the Town . . .
and Ten Acres
of Land reserved
for Publick
Uses.”
The Burying
Ground qualified
as such
a use and
so too the
Common for
military
training and
reviews. Later,
a petition
to the Township
proprietors
noted that
before incorporation
in 1773
a burying
place had
been reserved
on the Common
“ . . . and
some persons
interred there.”
The Town
History mentions Captain
John Groat who
died in 1771.
He is said to
have been the
first permanent
settler in what
is now Jaffrey,
having arrived
in 1758.
According
to local
legend he
was laid
to rest
on the spot
over which
the Meetinghouse
was raised
four years
later.
The present
form of
the Burying
Ground reflects
the work
of a committee
appointed
by the Town
in 1784. Of
the four members,
three—Roger
Gilmore (A), Daniel
Emery (B)
and Adonijah
Howe (C)—are
buried within.
No trace
remains
of the earliest
gravesites,
but at least
eight marked
graves pre-date
the laying
out of 1784,
the oldest
being that
of
Mrs.
Jaen Harper (D)
who died in
1777.
The claim
favoring
Captain
Groat as
the Town’s
first resident
is not without
challenge
as John
Davidson
(E) is recorded
as settling
in August
of 1753
(or 1749
if a complicated
technicality
involving
altered township
lines is
overlooked).
Certainly
of the earliest
settlers Davidson
is one of
the few who is
without question
buried here
and whose
headstone
survives to the
present. His
eldest daughter,
Betsey Davidson,
is referred to
in some sources
as the first
white child
born in Jaffrey.
On the other
hand, Simon
Stickney is
sometimes accorded
similar status,
while his
younger brother,
Moses Stickney
(F), who was
born in Boxford,
Massachusetts,
has carved
on his headstone,
He
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