Point of Graves Burial Ground is a small historic cemetery in
Portsmouth, New Hampshire, dating to the 17th century.[1] It was the final resting place for many of Portsmouth's prominent residents including the
Wentworth family, the Vaughan family,[A] the Rogers, and the Lears. It is the oldest known surviving
cemetery in Portsmouth, and one of the oldest in the state.[B][4][5] It has about 125 gravestones.[2][3] Previously neglected,[3][6] it is now well maintained by the Mayor's Committee and the city.[4][6] The cemetery plot was on a point of land that directly overlooked the
Piscataqua River in earlier times.[C]
History
Captain John Pickering II agreed to let the town have half an acre "upon the neck of land on which he liveth, where the people have been wont to be buried, which land shall be impropriated forever unto the use of a burying place." The earliest legible gravestone is dated 1682.
There are ghost stories related about the cemetery.[8][9][10][11] Putative
hauntings are part of tourist appeal.[12]
It is believed that the area was used as a cemetery prior to its formal dedication. However, because Pickering retained use of the site for
cattle grazing, many earlier stones were destroyed or damaged.[4][7]
Elizabeth Elatson (d. 1704–05), a
house fire victim, is buried there. The report in The Boston News-Letter was the first published account of a house fire in America.[E]
It is one of six cemeteries owned and maintained by the
City of Portsmouth, which is working under a comprehensive maintenance and restoration program. It is supported via the Historic Cemeteries Trust Fund.[15]
Location
It is located on the south side of Mechanic Street opposite
Prescott Park, between Marcy Street and the Peirce Island Bridge.[6] The area around it was once a center of coastal trade and warehouses.[16]
Tours of the graveyard are offered by local author Roxie Zwicker.[17]Yankee Magazine named it to the top five "best cemetery tours in New England" in 2017.[17][18] That evaluation seems to depend both on the cemetery, and the identity of the knowledgeable and amusing
docent, who opines that "cemeteries are art museums," is paired with a claimed spectral sidekick, and has visited over 400 New England burial grounds.[18]
^Which has a large and ornate crypt with a stairway beneath leading to 28 unidentified skeletons within.[2]
^An older cemetery was located near a mansion at Odiorne Point. It was said to be walled. However, the precise location was long ago lost to history.[3] See
Pannaway Plantation and
Odiorne Point State Park
^"Point of Graves is aptly named, because at one time it sat almost directly on a point of land that looked directly at the Piscataqua River."[7]
^Including Nathaniel Emmes; James Foster; John Hartshorne; John Homer; Joseph Mullicken; William Mumford, a Bostonian
Quaker; someone designated only by the initials "JN" (maybe silversmith John Noyes); perhaps master carver Joseph Lamson of Charlestown and his two sons, Caleb and Nathaniel.[4][7][13]
^"Elizabeth Elatson d.1704-05 helped rescue someone but died from her injuries two months later. The news reported in the Boston News-Letter was the first published account of a house fire in America."[4][14]
^
abcdef"Point of Graves Burial Ground Walking Tour"(PDF). Portsmouth Historic Graves. The Mayor's Blue Ribbon Cemetery Committee. Retrieved November 1, 2018. With the first burial here occurring in 1669, to being formally established in 1671,...
Zwicker, Roxie (July 1, 2007). Haunted Portsmouth: Spirits and Shadows of the Past. Charleston South Carolina: Haunted America.
ISBN9781596292338.
Zwicker, Roxie (2011). Haunted Cemeteries of New England: Stories. City: PublishingWorks.
ISBN9781283305525.
Zwicker, Roxie (2012). New Hampshire Book of the Dead: Graveyard Legends and Lore. Charleston, South Carolina:
The History Press.
ISBN978-1-609-49756-9.