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*[[Francis Lewis]] (1713–1802), signer of the Declaration of Independence
*[[Francis Lewis]] (1713–1802), signer of the Declaration of Independence
*[[Walter Livingston]] (1740–1797), delegate to the Continental Congress
*[[Walter Livingston]] (1740–1797), delegate to the Continental Congress
[[Image:0043TIARA P1000472.JPG|thumb|Grave of Lt. Colonel Franklin Wharton, USMC]]
*[[Luther Martin]] (1744–1826), delegate to the Continental Congress
*[[Luther Martin]] (1744–1826), delegate to the Continental Congress
*[[Charles McKnight]] (1750–1791), [[Continental Army]] surgeon
*[[Charles McKnight]] (1750–1791), [[Continental Army]] surgeon

Revision as of 00:08, 4 September 2013

Church of the Intercession and Trinity Church Cemetery
Trinity Church Cemetery at Broadway and Wall Street
Trinity Church Cemetery is located in New York City
Trinity Church Cemetery
LocationTrinity Church (shown): 74 Trinity Place
Church of the Intercession: 550 West 155th Street
St. Paul's Church: 315 West 22nd Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York
Built1697
NRHP reference No.80002677
A cenotaph marker erected by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers honoring Robert Fulton at Trinity Church.

Trinity Church Cemetery consists of three separate burial grounds associated with Trinity Church in Manhattan, New York, USA. The first was established in the Churchyard located at 74 Trinity Place at Wall Street and Broadway. In 1842, the church, running out of space in its churchyard, established Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum in Upper Manhattan between Broadway and Riverside Drive, at the Chapel of the Intercession (now The Church of the Intercession, New York), formerly the location of John James Audubon's estate. A third burial place is the Churchyard of St. Paul's Chapel.

The burial grounds have been the final resting place for many historic figures since the Churchyard cemetery opened in 1697. A non-denominational cemetery, it is listed in the United States National Register of Historic Places and is the only remaining active cemetery in Manhattan. There are two bronze plaques at the Church of the Intercession cemetery commemorating the Battle of Fort Washington, which included some of the fiercest fighting of the Revolutionary War.

Trinity Church Cemetery, along with Broadway, marks the center of the Heritage Rose District of NYC.[1]

Notable burials

Trinity Churchyard

Grave of Lt. Colonel Franklin Wharton, USMC

Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum

153rd Street
Riverside Drive
The grave of Alfred Dickens in Trinity Church Cemetery

Churchyard of St. Paul's Chapel

References