The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
WFNX_1000x50g

The quick and the dead: Underground in Providence

Grave-gawkers
By PHILIP EIL  |  September 17, 2008
Love56craf's_grave.jpg

It’s been a rough year for cemetery buffs. From ransacked Confederate graves in Virginia (they’re looking for brass buttons to pawn, experts say) to Poe scholars squabbling over the Raven-Man’s remains, the news hasn’t been good.

And what about that trip to Pere Lachaise? Well, as long as airfare to Paris is $1000, Jim Morrison, Proust, and Piaf are going to have to wait. Yes, times are tough for grave-gawkers, but it’s not all bad news. There’s plenty of funerary fun to be had — free of charge — in Providence.

Unlike Paris, where big shots like Chopin and Oscar Wilde are interred in one place, Providence’s tombstone tour has three top stops. The first site, Prospect Terrace Park on Congdon Street, is where the man who started this whole Rhode Island “experiment,” Roger Williams, rests. 

Famous for quipping, “Forced worship stinks in God’s nostrils,” Williams was initially buried on Prospect Hill in 1683. In 1860, however, his remains were moved to the North Burial Ground, only to be relocated once more (in 1939) to Prospect Park. “HERE REPOSES DUST FROM THE GRAVE OF ROGER WILLIAMS,” the monument reads, as Williams’s statue watches another condo mar his skyline.

The next stop on the headstone hike is Swan Point Cemetery, located on the city’s East Side, off the east side of Blackstone Boulevard, and it boasts an overwhelming number of important figures in local history.

Beneath its manicured lawns rest four recipients of the Congressional Medal of Honor, 23 former governors (including Theodore Francis Green, for whom the airport is named), and Helen Adelia Rose Metcalf, the founder of the RISD. Yes, you could spend all day roaming Swan Point (written walking guides are available at the office), but there are two headstones, in particular — George H. Corliss and H.P. Lovecraft — that shouldn’t be missed. 

Corliss was an engineer who found success manufacturing steam engines in Providence during the 19th century. His towering, 70-foot Corliss Steam Engine was the talk of the 1876 Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, where the machine powered the entire Machinery Hall.  Lovecraft was an anxiety-addled horror writer, who, since his death in 1937, has risen to high literary esteem. He is also the owner — albeit posthumously — of the coolest epitaph in town. His headstone reads, “I Am Providence.”

Finally, anyone interested in Providence’s subterranean A-list must pay a visit to the North Burial Ground, off of North Main Street. Though it has big names of its own — celebrated education advocate, Horace Mann; governor, Revolutionary War vet, and signer of the Declaration of Independence, Stephen Hopkins — it’s best to simply browse the Old Section. Here, the names on headstones — Angell, Waterman, Jenckes — echo those found on the city’s streets. Tombstones tell of bygone sicknesses: small pox, consumption, and cholera. And then there’s the violence.

The Old Section’s inscriptions seem ripped from a Tarantino script. There’s Freelove Ball, the mother of nine who “died from stabs inflicted with a knife” and Captain Thomas Green Hull, who, “left New York for Baltimore 21 Dec. 1864 . . . was found lashed to the mast of his sunken and ill fated vessel.”

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Is Rhode Island still a state for sale?, ACLU, fighting the good fight, 30 on 30, More more >
  Topics: The Editorial Page , Oscar Wilde, Roger Williams, Stephen Hopkins,  More more >
| More

ARTICLES BY PHILIP EIL
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   IN DESILVA’S MYSTERY CLIFF WALK, FACT AND FICTION BLUR  |  May 30, 2012
    There is a moment in Bruce DeSilva's new book, Cliff Walk , when the novel's hero — a wisecracking, coffee-swilling investigative reporter named Liam Mulligan — flops on his mattress to read a book by former Tampa Tribune reporter Ace Atkins. "Crime novels were his parachute out of the newspaper business," Mulligan says. "If only I had that kind of talent."
  •   A SPOON-BENDING MENTALIST TAKES ON THE GASPEE AFFAIR  |  May 23, 2012
    Plaques and parades are nice, but the real story of the HMS Gaspee — the British customs schooner looted and burned off the coast of Rhode Island in the run-up to the Revolutionary War — is not rated "G."
  •   OBEY THE GIANT DEBUTS  |  May 16, 2012
    A black Lincoln Town Car drives through the darkened streets of Providence.
  •   WHEN THE HIPSTER LABEL HURTS  |  May 09, 2012
    Don't call it a "cool church," pastor Andrew Mook says.
  •   THE LAUNCH OF PVD PUDDING POPS  |  May 15, 2012
    Valeria Khislavsky woke up in the middle of the night last summer with an idea: she was going to sell pudding. It was a mysterious vision, she says. She didn't have any particular attachment to pudding as a child; she isn't obsessed with pudding pop pitchman Bill Cosby. But it was, in a way, perfectly logical.

 See all articles by: PHILIP EIL



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group