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Trinity Church Cemetery

The parish of Trinity Church has three separate burial grounds associated with it in the New York City borough of Manhattan. The first, Trinity Churchyard, is located in Lower Manhattan at 74 Trinity Place, near Wall Street and Broadway. Alexander Hamilton and his wife Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton, Albert Gallatin, and Robert Fulton are buried in the downtown Trinity Churchyard.[1]

Location

Trinity Church (shown):
74 Trinity Place
Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum 770 Riverside Drive
St. Paul's Chapel: 209 Broadway
Manhattan, New York, U.S.

1697

The second Trinity parish burial ground is the St. Paul's Chapel Churchyard, which is also located in lower Manhattan (roughly 440 yards (400 m)), six blocks north of Trinity Church. It was established in 1766. Both of these churchyards are closed to new burials.


Trinity's third place of burial, Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum, located in Hamilton Heights in Upper Manhattan, is one of the few active burial sites in Manhattan.[2] Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum is listed on the National Register of Historic places and is the burial place of notable people including John James Audubon, John Jacob Astor IV, Mayor Edward I. Koch, Governor John Adams Dix, Ralph Ellison, and Eliza Jumel.[3] In 1823, all burials south of Canal Street became forbidden by New York City due to city crowding, yellow fever, and other public health fears.[4]


After considering locations in the Bronx and portions of the then-new Green-Wood Cemetery, in 1842 Trinity Parish purchased the plot of land now bordered by 153rd Street, 155th Street, Amsterdam Avenue, and Riverside Drive to establish the Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum. The cemetery is located beside the Chapel of the Intercession that Audubon co-founded in 1846, but this chapel is no longer part of Trinity parish.[4] James Renwick, Jr., is the architect of Trinity Church Cemetery and further updates were made by Calvert Vaux.[5] The uptown cemetery is also the center of the Heritage Rose District of New York City.


A no-longer-extant Trinity Parish burial ground was the Old Saint John's Burying Ground for St. John's Chapel. This location is bounded by Hudson, Leroy and Clarkson streets near Hudson Square. It was in use from 1806 to 1852 with over 10,000 burials, mostly poor and young. In 1897, it was turned into St. John's Park, with most of the burials left in place. The park was later renamed Hudson Park, and is now James J. Walker Park.[6] (This park is different from a separate St. John's Park, a former private park and residential block approximately one mile to the south that now serves as part of the Holland Tunnel access.)

(1726–1783), Continental Army major general during the American Revolution

William Alexander, Lord Stirling

(1724–1794), Continental Congress delegate

John Alsop

(1761–1826), banker

William Bayard Jr.

(1744–1813), Canadian painter and pioneer buried in unmarked grave and name recorded as William Burksay

William Berczy

(1660–1752), colonial American printer

William Bradford

Richard Churcher (1676–1681), a child whose grave is marked with the oldest carved in New York City

gravestone

(1756–1814), daughter of Philip Schuyler, sister of Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton and Margarita Schuyler Van Rensselaer

Angelica Schuyler Church

(1742–1775), frontiersman

Michael Cresap

(1703–1760), Colonial Governor of New York

James De Lancey

(1832–1896), U.S. representative

John R. Fellows

(1765–1815), inventor of the first commercially successful steamboat

Robert Fulton

(1761–1849), U.S. congressman, Secretary of the Treasury, founder of New York University

Albert Gallatin

(1727–1806), Continental Army general during the American Revolution

Horatio Gates

(1735–1783), 80th Regiment of Foot (Royal Edinburgh Volunteers) Lieutenant Colonel

James Gordon

(1783–1868), U.S. representative

Aaron Hackley, Jr.

(1755/57–1804), American revolutionary patriot and Founding Father; first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, and a signer of the United States Constitution, husband of Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton

Alexander Hamilton

(1757–1854), co-founder and deputy director of New York's first private orphanage,[7] now Graham Windham

Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton

(1782–1801), first son of Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton and Alexander Hamilton, grandson of U.S. General Philip Schuyler, nephew of Angelica Schuyler Church and Margarita Schuyler Van Rensselaer

Philip Hamilton

(1738–1805), U.S. senator

John Sloss Hobart

(1792–1874), U.S. congressman

William Hogan

(1781–1813), naval hero during the War of 1812

James Lawrence

(1713–1802), signer of the Declaration of Independence

Francis Lewis

(1740–1797), delegate to the Continental Congress

Walter Livingston

(1744–1826), delegate to the Continental Congress

Luther Martin

(1750–1791), Continental Army surgeon

Charles McKnight

(1770–1849), U.S. representative

John Jordan Morgan

(1740–1825), spy during the American Revolution, friend of Alexander Hamilton

Hercules Mulligan

(1783–1857), U.S. representative

Thomas Jackson Oakley

(1730–1784), Continental Congress delegate, Revolutionary War general, first secretary of state of New York

John Morin Scott

(1820–1875), diarist, abolitionist, lawyer

George Templeton Strong

(1779–1848), brigadier general, Quartermaster general of the War of 1812

Robert Swartwout

(1750–1813), U.S. Navy commodore, second captain of the USS Constitution

Silas Talbot

(1749–1836), U.S. representative

John Watts

(1767–1818), Commandant of the Marine Corps, 1804–1818

Franklin Wharton

(1735–1802), American politician, signer of the Constitution of the United States

Hugh Williamson

(1697–1746), newspaper publisher whose libel trial helped establish the right to a free press

John Peter Zenger

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Official website

Trinity Churchyard

of the Trinity Church Cemetery.

Hi-Res Photo Gallery

Trinity Tombstone & Churchyard Gallery

Trinity Church Cemetery and Mausoleum records at Trinity Wall Street Archives