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Kinne Cemetery, also known as the Glasgo Cemetery and Old Kinne Burying Ground, is a historic cemetery in Jarvis Road in Griswold, Connecticut. The earliest marked stone is for Daniel Kinne who died in 1713. In the 1930s, the inscriptions of 79 stones in the Kinne Cemetery were recorded for the . There are around 80 fieldstones with no carving or identification, but it is unknown if this stems from wearing of the gneiss stone or that there were no skilled carvers locally available. The seven carvers that have been identified are Lebbeus Kimball, Jotham Warren, Josiah Manning, Peter Barker, Mr. Huntington of Lebanon, E. Marston of Mystic Bridge and O. Doty of Stonington. The National Historic Register of Places nomination notes, "the cemetery is significant artistically because the carving

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  • Kinne Cemetery (en)
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  • Kinne Cemetery, also known as the Glasgo Cemetery and Old Kinne Burying Ground, is a historic cemetery in Jarvis Road in Griswold, Connecticut. The earliest marked stone is for Daniel Kinne who died in 1713. In the 1930s, the inscriptions of 79 stones in the Kinne Cemetery were recorded for the . There are around 80 fieldstones with no carving or identification, but it is unknown if this stems from wearing of the gneiss stone or that there were no skilled carvers locally available. The seven carvers that have been identified are Lebbeus Kimball, Jotham Warren, Josiah Manning, Peter Barker, Mr. Huntington of Lebanon, E. Marston of Mystic Bridge and O. Doty of Stonington. The National Historic Register of Places nomination notes, "the cemetery is significant artistically because the carving (en)
foaf:name
  • Kinne Cemetery (en)
name
  • Kinne Cemetery (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Kinne_Cemetery_1747_stone.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Kinne_Cemetery_1766_stone.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Kinne_Cemetery_1773_founder_stone.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Kinne_Cemetery_1792_stone.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Kinne_Cemetery_Mill_Ruins.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Old_Kinne_Burial_Grounds,_Griswold.jpg
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  • Jarvis Rd., Griswold, Connecticut (en)
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  • Connecticut#USA (en)
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  • 41.556666666666665 -71.8875
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  • Kinne Cemetery, also known as the Glasgo Cemetery and Old Kinne Burying Ground, is a historic cemetery in Jarvis Road in Griswold, Connecticut. The earliest marked stone is for Daniel Kinne who died in 1713. In the 1930s, the inscriptions of 79 stones in the Kinne Cemetery were recorded for the . There are around 80 fieldstones with no carving or identification, but it is unknown if this stems from wearing of the gneiss stone or that there were no skilled carvers locally available. The seven carvers that have been identified are Lebbeus Kimball, Jotham Warren, Josiah Manning, Peter Barker, Mr. Huntington of Lebanon, E. Marston of Mystic Bridge and O. Doty of Stonington. The National Historic Register of Places nomination notes, "the cemetery is significant artistically because the carving on the stones gives many good examples of the funerary art that was characteristic of the 18th and 19th centuries in New England." The cemetery is notable because of the burial of Isaac C. Glasko, the namesake of the village of Glasgo, and a prominent African American land-holding man who ran a blacksmith shop that was important to the marine industry of the area. The cemetery was made a part of the in 1995 and it was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 12, 2001. (en)
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  • 01000351
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  • POINT(-71.887496948242 41.556667327881)
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