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Home > Gravestone Carvers - Sandstone, Marble, Schist 1657-1850

John Ely


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A West Springfield native, John Ely began carving in the 1760s, and was probably trained by William Holland or Joseph Williston. His shop was located almost directly across the Great River from Williston, a contemporary carver. With a distinctive cherub carved in deep relief on his more expensive stones, John's work can be easily identified in numerous burying grounds up and down the Connecticut River Valley.

29 files, last one added on Apr 20, 2009

Joseph Williston


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Joseph Williston was another Springfield carver who was very likely trained by William Holland during his short stay in the area. Williston's shop was located approximately at the end of the current Liberty Street, on the banks of the Connecticut River. A very brief carving career, ending with his death in 1768, produced a large quantity of gravestones throughout the valley.

10 files, last one added on Aug 12, 2010

The Stebbins Shop


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The Stebbins Shop produced an abundance of stones out of Longmeadow in the late 1700s and early 1800s. The Farber Collection attributes at least twelve distinctive styles to the Stebbins School. While we are still unsure of the individual carver's names, we know where they worked.

14 files, last one added on Aug 01, 2010

Aaron Bliss


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Aaron Bliss commonly carved his gravestones from a chocolate colored stone quarried out of the Wilbraham area. His cherubs have wings which resemble a beagle’s floppy ears. In Westfield, his work also appears on red sandstone, likely originating from the Longmeadow quarries.

7 files, last one added on Nov 27, 2009

Stanclift Family


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The Stanclifts were one of the earliest and most influential of the carving families of the lower Connecticut River Valley. Their work extends from the late 1600s into the nineteenth century and includes five generations of carvers. The various Stanclifts worked in sandstone; that used for stones in eastern Connecticut came from their great quarry in Portland.

William Stanclift (1686-1761) was the oldest son of James I. Like his father he carved in capital letters, and some of his stones also have evenly rounded tops. William, however, produced stones with designs, including some delightful folk-skulls and Halloween-like faces. His more common stones are shouldered and have nicely executed but simple rosettes in the finials. He used the “thorn” in his legends, which James I never did. William’s stones are distributed throughout the Connecticut River Valley even into Massachusetts and also along the coastal areas of eastern Connecticut.

From: Slater, James A. The Colonial Burying Grounds of Eastern Connecticut and the Men Who Made Them. Memoirs of the Connecticut Academy of Arts & Sciences, vol. 21. Hamden, Connecticut: Archon Books, 1987.

3 files, last one added on Nov 26, 2006

Thomas Johnson Family


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The Thomas Johnson family worked out of the Middletown, Ct. quarries, actually called the Johnson quarries locally. Producing gravestones for over one hundred years, they heavily influenced the work of many Connecticut River carvers. The elder Thomas was one of the first gravestone carvers in the area to exhibit preplanned lettering on his stones, and the quality of his letters shows care and attention to detail rarely found on earlier stones.

7 files, last one added on Mar 17, 2009

Aaron Haskins


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Aaron Haskins was heavily influenced by the Manning and Collins schools of carving. Based out of Bolton, Ct, he was an accomplished carver. His cherub in the tympanum of the David Olmsted stone was so unusual, we featured it on the cover of the Enfield Connecticut: Stories Carved in Stone book.

1 files, last one added on Oct 25, 2006

Gershom Bartlett


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Gershom Bartlett began his carving career in the Windsor, Ct. area, where he carved on the local sandstone. After moving to Bolton, Ct. in 1751, he began carving extensively on the local schist, quite a different texture and consistency from the sandstone he was accustomed to carving in Windsor. Even after moving to Bolton, he retained his loyal customer base in Enfield, as both sandstone and schist stones bearing his carvings can be found there.

2 files, last one added on Oct 25, 2006

Ebenezer Drake


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Ebenezer Drake carved out of the South Windsor sandstone quarries with his brothers, Silas and Nathaniel. Ebenezer was a carver who seemed to be constantly dissatisfied with his work, as he constantly moved from style to style. As he grew older, he let his imagination run more freely, resulting in stones which were often said to scare children out of the burying grounds after dark.

3 files, last one added on Aug 01, 2010

Lathrop Family


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The Lathrop family, consisting of Thatcher, the father, and Loring and Luther, the sons, worked out of the same sandstone quarry as the Drake brothers in South Windsor, Ct. Strongly influenced by the Mannings of southern Connecticut, they brought the popular style to the north.

13 files, last one added on Aug 02, 2010

William Holland


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William Holland had a brief, but very influential, stay in the Springfield area during the mid 1700s. He apprenticed under Joseph Johnson, carving out of the East Windsor quarries. While working together, they gained a reputation for heavy drinking, running up large rum tabs at the local taverns. His style of carving cherubs will be seen for fifty years after he left the area.

3 files, last one added on Nov 26, 2006

Ezra Stebbins


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Ezra Stebbins began a prolific carving shop in Longmeadow, MA in the mid 1700s, and his early work bears a strong resemblance to that of William Holland.

8 files, last one added on Mar 17, 2009

21 albums on 2 page(s) 1

Last additions - Gravestone Carvers - Sandstone, Marble, Schist 1657-1850
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Mary Dickinson 17634 viewsIn Memory of
Mrs Mary
wife of
Mr Jonathan
Dickinson who
died april 10 1763
in her 63d Year

Behold he taketh away
who can hinder him
who will say unto him
what dost thou
Aug 12, 2010
watson_maryan_1783.jpg
Maryan Watson 17833 viewsIn Memory of
Miss Maryan
Daugh'r of Lt
Samuel & Mrs
Sarah Watson
Died Octob'r
13th 1783 in the
21st Year of
her Age
Aug 02, 2010
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Augustus Prior 17740 viewsIn Memory of
Augustus the
Son of Mr Joel
and Mrs Jerutha
Prior who Died
May the 13th AD
1774 in ye 6th Year
of his Age
Aug 02, 2010
prior_daughter_1779.jpg
Prior daughter 17791 viewsIn Memory of
the Daughter of
Mr Joel & Mrs
Jerutha Prior
who died August
the 9th AD 1779 in ye
4th year of Her
Age
Aug 02, 2010
thomson_anne_1786.jpg
Anne Thomson 17860 viewsIn memory of
Anne daughter
to Mr John & Mrs
Anne Thomson
who died Octob'r
ye 10 AD 1786
in ye 18th year
of her age
Aug 02, 2010
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Luke Watson 17752 viewsIn Memory
of
Mr Luke Son
of Lt Samuel &
Mrs Sarah Wat
son he Died Sept
22nd 1775 in the
20th Year
of his
Age
Aug 01, 2010
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Robert Watson 18xx1 viewsIn Memory of
Mr Robert
Watson who
died March 8th
AD 18xx
Aged 53 years
Aug 01, 2010
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Sarah Watson 17870 viewsIn Memory
of Sarah (Daugh
of Mr Ebenez
& Mrs Sarah
Watson) Died
April 23 1787
in the 3rd Year
of her Age
Aug 01, 2010

Random files - Gravestone Carvers - Sandstone, Marble, Schist 1657-1850
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Stephen and Archelaus Russell 178323 viewsOriginally erected in the Old South Burying Ground, which was located where Court Square is now, it was moved to Springfield Cemetery when the railroad was built in the mid 1800s.

The verse reads:
Reader beware
venture not too far
to save one drowning
lest my fate you share
The second time
I ventur'd in to save
a brother drowning
brought me to my grave
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Eli Boies 179124 viewsIn Memory of
Mr Eli Boies Son of
Dea'n Samuel Boies
who was of an ami
able temper an Obedi
ent Child. A faithful
Studient lov'd Religeon
Was loved and lament
ed by all and died
3rd June 1791 in the
24th Year of his Age
And 2nd of his
Collegiate Life
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Asa Burt 177452 viewsThis deep red sandstone was carved by Solomon Brewer, whom we met in the Union Street and Federal Hill Cemeteries. He carved the fancy double portraits, and the gravestone for the unfortunate Hessian who died by a lightning strike. Solomon seems to have a knack for finding accident victims.

A little genealogical info - From Springfield Families:

16 JAMES BURT (Henry & Elizabeth), b 9 Oct. 1703, m int 6 Nov. 1725 Mercy Sexton (James & Hannah) b 26 Dec. 1695

Children

Mercy, b 18 Sept. 1726, m Stephen Warriner

Phebe, b 4 Aug. 1728, m Thomas Stebbins

Katherine, b 2 Mch. 1731, m Stephen Bliss

James, b 11 June 1733, m Catherine _____, see deed 42-98 (dau. Abigail m David Bates,

dau. Mercy m Horace Cadwell, wid. Catherine m Cornelius Merry)

Asa, b 3 June 1737, m Ruth Hubbard

Wife d 22 June 1746. James m (2) 30 July 1747 (1st Ch. Rec) Margaret Bliss (William & Margaret)

b. 3 June 1715

Children

Margaret, b 28 July 1748, m Solomon Deming

Sibbel, b 13 Oct. 1750, m Nathan Spellman

Caleb, b 18 July 1754, went to Sandisfield, MA

Mercy, b 18 July 1754, m William Cornwell or Cornwall

Jonathan, b 22 Apr. 1756

James went to Granville, MA., 1st Ch. Rec. He bought his farm in Granville in 1756-1757. See deeds Y-422, Y-675, 37-341, 298, 42-98.
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Deacon John Barber 1712192 viewsThe Barber family purchased a set of gravestones for Deacon John Barber in 1712 bearing a skull with wings and a crown. Gravestones were carved and erected in pairs in the colonial era. Each grave was made up like a bed with a headstone and a footstone.
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Ezra Clapp 176825 viewsMemento Mori

In Memory of
Mr Ezra Clap
who died Octr 25th
AD 1768
In the 53 Year
of his Age

All you that stand & view this stone
Prepare for death as I have done
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Stephen Harrison 179011 viewsIn Memory of
Mr Stephen
Son of Mr Stephen
Mrs Susannah
Harrison who died
19th July 1790
in the 19th Year
of his Age

Ye youths so gay prepare I say
for Death will surely come
and lay aside all youthfull pride
that Christ might take you home
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Daniel Fowler 1802100 viewsIn Memory of
Mr Daniel Fowler
who departed this life
July 31st AD 1802 aged 73
and of
Mrs Elenor Fowler
his Wife who died
Decr 4th AD 1791 aged 60

Husband and Wife must part by death
To God they both resign their breath
But parted from our earthly home
We sleep together in the tomb
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Samuel Mather Esq 180811 viewsIn Memory
of the Honle
Saml Mathe Esq
who died 7th Decr
1808 Aet 72

Unshaken as the Sacred Hill
And firm as Mountain be
Firm as a rock the soul shall rest
that leans O Lord on thee