| Pleasant Hill Cemetery |
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Pleasant Hill Cemetery Click here for a database to search graves in Pleasant Hill Cemetery. Pleasant Hill Cemetery is an historic burying ground originally associated with the Great Works woolen mill on Brattle Street, and dates to at least the mid-1800s. Many textile mill workers employed at the Newichawanick Woolen Company are buried here. The Second Advent Society at Great Works had a small church opposite the cemetery and a bit downhill. The society was founded in 1870 by Rev. J. G. Smith and Rev. T. W. Piper and 15 original members. At left is a map showing from the Atlas of York County, 1872. Many residents shown on this map are buried in Pleasant Hill cemetery. The cemetery and the church are near the top, on Wadleigh Lane, with the Academy Street below, and the Newichawannock Woolen Mill at the bottom. The railroad shown on this map has today been replaced by Route 236. Among the graves are those of many residents associated with the Great Works Also buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery are members of the Williams family, descendants of Uriah Williams, an African American soldier who served in the American Revolution. The location of Uriah's grave is not Williams family members worked at the mills at Great Works and on the railroad, and one may be shown in this photo showing fire brigade training at the mill in the late 1800s. Mill mechanic Samuel H. Miller (1860-1937), is buried in Pleasant Hill Cemetery Three members of the Wiggin family also Wiggin lighting rod in the Counting House Museum collection Some examples of the many other Civil War veterans buried in Pleasant Street Cemetery are: H. A. Bennett, Company K 32nd Maine Infantry Richard W. Carpenter (1847-1922) Company B 27th Maine Regiment Volunteer Charles H. Horne (c. 1839-1906), 2nd New Hampshire Regiment Levi Howard (1829-1890), Member Company H 9th Regiment New Hampshire Volunteers Ivory Pray (c. 1831-1880) John H. Young, b. 1841, Company H 6th NH Volunteers A significant number of 20th century veterans are also buried in Pleasant Street Cemetery. To name just a few: Lionell Eugene Ball (1894-1958), Maine 2nd Lieutenant Air Service World War I Raymond G. Beaven (1897-1975), SFC US Army World War I Almond R. Besse, who died in 1940, Maine Pvt US Army Edwin E. Boston (1895-1918), F Boston Pvt E Company 2nd Division BN USA Alvin Carpenter, Corpl Company A I Batt Maine Infantry Donald Carpenter (1937-1994), TSgt US Air Force Vietnam Charles W. Clough (1897-1965) NH Pvt Company B 73 Inv World War I Harold W. Clough (1925-1999) S1 US Navy World War II Carroll E. Pierce (1906-1963), NH Tec 5 106 Mecz Cav Recon Sq World War II Eli J. Tebo (1894-1965), Massachusetts Sgt 738 Company MTC World War I Russell Clement Goodwin (1925-2002), U. S. Marine Corps, World War II. He raised Braemuir Polled Shorthorns on his dairy farm which is a landmark at the corner of Route 236 and Brattle Street, not far from Pleasant Hill Cemetery. The farm appears as the E. S. Goodwin home on the above map in the lower right-hand corner. Other local citizens buried here include: Richard M. Davis (1864-1962), son of tinsmith Joseph Porter Davis (1833-1904). The great downtown Fire of 1870 was said to have originated in Joseph P. Davis’s tin shop near Central Square. Richard's son, Linwood "Darby" Davis, (1907- 2008) lived to the age of 101. Darby was raised and educated in South Berwick and graduated from Berwick Academy. He was employed at the Rocky Gorge Woolen Mills at Great Works. Later he moved his family to the Lawrence, MA, area to work as a plant engineer for Malden Mills, where he retired in 1973. Margaret Pollard Foote, local historian, (1834-1915), lived on Brattle Street near the woolen mill. Her home is labeled "Miss Foote" on Brattle Street, shown as the horizontal street near the bottom the above map. Estelle Garvin, (c. 1848-1872), died at age 24, followed by her husband, Alonzo Garvin (c. 1838-1877), who drowned at age 39. Charles Keays (c. 1812-1879), was a stonemason who lived on Academy Street opposite the Federated Church today.Frederick A. Webster (1851-1929), for whom Webster Street is apparently named. He was the “Local Agent for Stockbridge and Bowkers Fertilizers, Bowker’s Early Potato Manure, Bowker’s Corn, Grain and Grass Fertilizers,” according to the South Berwick town report of 1900. He also sold “Stoves, Ranges, Kitchen Furnishing Goods, Table and Pocket Cutlery, Farming Tools” as well as paint and “Furniture of every description.”
(This page revised June 2010.) |