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Copp's Hill Burying Ground
 

Copp's Hill Burying Ground is Boston's second oldest burying ground. It was first founded in 1659 as Windmill Hill. The area got its name because a a shoemaker, William Copp, once owned the land.

Thousands of artisans, craftspeople, and merchants are buried on the Hill. Additionally, thousands of African Americans who lived in the "New Guinea" community at the base of Copp's Hill are buried in unmarked graves on the Snowhill Street side. Also interred at Copp's Hill are the Mather family of ministers; shipyard owner Edmund Hartt; Robert Newman, best know for placing the signal lanterns in the steeple of the "Old North" Church on the eve of the Battle of Lexington and Concord; Shem Drowne, the weathervane maker who crafted the grasshopper atop Faneuil Hall; and Prince Hall, the anti-slavery activist and founder of the Black Masonic Order.

Location:

Hull Street, Boston
MBTA: Haymarket, and North Station

Hours of Operation:Open Daily 9-5
For More Information:

www.thefreedomtrail.org/visitor/copp-hill.html
or call (617) 357-8300


 


 

Content provided by The Freedom Trail Foundation

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Exploring the Freedom Trail
A video tour of Boston's famous Freedom Trail.
Episode 1
Boston Common, the Massachuetts State House, the Park Street Church and the Granary Burial Ground.
Watch Video »
Episode 2
King's Chapel, The King's Chapel Burial Ground, the Benjamin Frankin Statue, the Boston Latin School, and The Old Corner Bookstore.
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Episode 3
The Old State House, the site of the Boston Massacre, and Faneuil Hall.
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Episode 4
Paul Revere's House, The Old North Church, Copp's Hill Burial Ground, the USS Constitution, and the Bunker Hill Monument.
Watch Video »
 
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