The articles provided in this collection were researched, compiled, assembled, and curated by Dave Oat. Many thanks go out to Dave for his untold hours of research and for sharing these stories with IconicNorwich.org.
The biographies of those interred in the Yantic Cemetery tell stories of thousands of nineteenth-century residents of Norwich. The articles chronicle the lives of inventors, philanthropists, doctors, bankers, industrialists, lawyers, politicians, and many other Norwich notables. Collectively, they tell the story of Norwich in the nineteenth century.
This rural burial place was consecrated on July 12, 1844, with all denominations of Christians in the city of Norwich uniting in the service. The address was delivered by Dr. Alvan Bond, of the Second Congregational Church, and the consecrating prayer offered by Mr. Paddock, the Episcopal rector. Two original hymns were sung, composed by Mr. Charles Thurber.
The Yantic Cemetery is the property of the City of Norwich and has been enlarged several times since its initial purchase. More than twenty thousand souls rest here, each with their own story. Built during the Victorian era, Yantic Cemetery was designed in the garden or rural cemetery style popularized during the 1800s. It contains many beautiful and fascinating monuments, many of which were crafted by local craftsmen, including Charles Kuebler, whose shop was located on lower Franklin Street. Following the great Civil War, Norwich pledged to make every effort to retrieve all its fallen veterans. Here are gathered within its bounds the hallowed remains of the brave soldiers who fell upon distant battlefields and others who perished in dreary prisons. They have been brought home and now rest in peace beneath these quiet shades.
Early 1900s View of the Entrance to Yantic Cemetery
Bronze Statue at Sarah Osgood’s Gravesite
The table below is searchable and can be sorted by the “Person”, “Occupation”, or “Associated With” columns. The “Person” column is sorted by year of birth of the person by default.
EXAMPLE: Click on the small, downward-facing gray arrow to the right of the word “Occupation” to sort the column.
| Person | Keywords | Link to Article | Occupation | Association With |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1768-1854 Joseph Otis | Broadway Congregational Church, Otis Library | Click Here | Businessman | Congregational Church |
| 1782-1864 Gurdon Chapman | Uncas Bank Norwich, Mayor of Norwich | Click Here | Banker | Merchants' Bank of Norwich |
| 1788-1870 General William Williams | Acors Barns, whaling business, American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions | Click Here | Businessman | Merchants' Bank of Norwich |
| 1788-1888 George L. Perkins | President of the Norwich & Worcester Railroad Company, Norwich Arcanum Club | Click Here | Railroad official | Norwich & Worcester Railroad |
| 1791-1865 Amos Hallman Hubbard | Yantic Falls, A.H. Hubbard Company | Click Here | Manufacturer | Hubbard Paper Mill |
| 1791-1865 John Breed | John Breed & Co., hardware cutlery tools merchant, Norwich Savings Bank, Breed Hall | Click Here | Merchant | John Breed & Co. |
| 1793-1855 Charles Coit | War of 1812, Second Congregational Church | Click Here | Merchant | Congregational Church |
| 1793-1882 Reverend Alvan Bond | Pastor of Second Congregational Church, Breed Hall Civil War meeting | Click Here | Minister | Congregational Church |
| 1794-1880 Leonard Ballou | cotton manufacturer, First National Bank of Norwich, Park Congregational Church | Click Here | Manufacturer | Congregational Church |
| 1795-1863 William Charles Gilman | automated nail-cutting machine, President of the Norwich & Worcester Railroad Co., established Greeneville | Click Here | Manufacturer | Norwich & Worcester Railroad |
| 1795-1864 William P. Greene | Norwich Water Company, Greeneville Dam, President of Thames National Bank | Click Here | Manufacturer | Shetucket Company |
| 1795-1880 Harriet Peck Williams | philanthropist, Williams School in New London, Park Congregational Church donor | Click Here | Philanthropist | Norwich Free Academy |
| 1796-1873 David Smith | Chelsea Manufacturing Company Greeneville, paper manufacturer, Park Congregational Church donor | Click Here | Businessman | Chelsea Mfg. Paper Mill |
| 1803-1892 William W. Backus | farmer, large herd of cattle, W.W. Backus Hospital | Click Here | Farmer | Backus Hospital |
| 1804-1875 William Alfred Buckingham | Connecticut Civil War Governor, Mayor of Norwich, carpet manufacturee | Click Here | Statesman | Government |
| 1805-1895 Chauncey Knight Bushnell | Mary Louise Fuller, Anti-slavery Society, | Click Here | Educator | Norwich Free Academy |
| 1806-1879 Charles C. Johnson | Norwich Savings Society, Norwich & Worcester Railroad Co., Second Congregational Church | Click Here | Banker | Congregational Church |
| 1806-1880 Lafayette Sabine Foster | Mayor of Norwich, U.S. Senator, acting Vice-President of the U.S. | Click Here | Statesman | Government |
| 1806-1886 Capt. George W. Geer | ship builder, sea captain, inventor, steamboat Shetucket, steamboat Charles Osgood | Click Here | Shipbuilder | Norwich & Worcester Railroad |
| 1807-1884 James L. Smith | author, shoe maker, slavery survivor | Click Here | Shoemaker | Civil War |
| 1808-1881 Dr. Charles Osgood | medical doctor, Mayor of Norwich, druggist, Shetucket Bank | Click Here | Druggist | Charles Osgood & Co. |
| 1808-1900 Moses Pierce | First Congregational Church, abolitionist, Norwich & New York Steamboat Co. | Click Here | Manufacturer | Norwich Bleaching, Dyeing & Printing Co. |
| 1809-1874 Charles Coffey Alger | iron works, pig iron, inventor | Click Here | Manufacturer | Hudson Iron Co. |
| 1809-1888 Capt. John Adams Robinson | Steamboat Tiger Lily, Steamboat Water Lily | Click Here | Steamboat Captain | Steamboats |
| 1810-1849 David Ruggles | blacksmith, underground railroad, New York City bookstore | Click Here | Abolitionist | Bean Hill |
| 1811-1887 Ebenezer Learned | founded Norwich Fire Insurance Co., real estate industry | Click Here | Insurance, real estate | Norwich Fire Insurance Co. |
| 1811-1890 Honorable John T. Wait | studied law with Lafayette S. Foster, politician, congressman | Click Here | Lawyer | Government |
| 1815-1884 John Fox Slater | cotton mill, Jewett City, Edward Chappell, Lorenzo Blackstone, Norwich Free Academy | Click Here | Manufacturer | Ponemah Mills |
| 1815-1900 Lucius Wyman Carroll | retail store for mill and manufacturing supplies, Flat Iron Building, Central Baptist Church | Click Here | Merchant | L.W. Carroll & Son |
| 1816-1894 Amos W. Prentice | Broadway Congregational Church, Trustee Norwich Free Academy, Norwich Savings Society | Click Here | Merchant | A.W. Prentice & Co. |
| 1819-1888 Lorenzo Blackstone | Hayward Rubber Co., international businessman, Attawaugan Mills, President of Chelsea Savings Bank, Mayor of Norwich | Click Here | Businessman | Ponemah Mills |
| 1819-1896 Willis Rogers Austin | lawyer, traveller | Click Here | Businessman | Retired in Norwich |
| 1820-1896 John W. Stedman | Norwich Aurora newspaper, Norwich Board of Education | Click Here | Printer | The Norwich Aurora |
| 1821-1897 Charles Young | Young's Block, F.W. Woolworth Company, Samuel Huntington homestead, Norwich Ct. German Lutheran Church | Click Here | Real estate | Young's Block |
| 1821-1899 Hugh Henry Osgood | Presiden of Uncas Paper Co., Goodwin Cork Co., Dime Savings Bank, Park Congregational Church, Mayor of Norwich, Norwich Bleaching, Dyeing & Printing Co. | Click Here | Businessman | Congregational Church |
| 1822-1896 Jeremiah Halsey | lawyer, bar of U.S. Supreme Court February 24 1870 | Click Here | Lawyer | Government |
| 1822-1907 John Denison Crocker | portrait painter, inventor, Crocker's Magical Stomach Powders | Click Here | Artist | Self-employed |
| 1824-1891 Henry Bill | illustrated Bible, Laurel Hill, Broadway Congregational Church | Click Here | Publisher | Henry Bill Publishing Co. |
| 1825-1916 Phillipena Young | dressmaker, Young's Block | Click Here | Dressmaker | Young's Block |
| 1826-1871 William T. Norton | businessman, wholesale groceries, steamboat City of New London, | Click Here | Businessman | Steamboat City of New London |
| 1827-1898 David Ames Wells | author, financial adviosor to Abraham Lincoln, economic issues, tariffs | Click Here | Economic advisor | Several U.S. Presidents |
| 1828-1886 Alfred H. Vaughn | founded Norwich iron Foundry, architectural ironwork, Ferry Street | Click Here | Manufacturer | Norwich Iron Foundry |
| 1828-1890 Ezra W. Yerrington | wholesale and retail carpet, home furnishings, oil cloth | Click Here | Merchant | E.W. Yerrington Store |
| 1830-1888 E. Winslow Williams | Rockclyffe, Yantic Fire Company, Merchants Hotel Norwich Ct | Click Here | Manufacturer | Yantic Woolen Mills |
| 1831-1908 Daniel Coit Gilman | President of Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Norwich historian | Click Here | Education administrator | Johns Hopkins University |
| 1834-1911 William Callyhan Robinson | educator, jurist, Protestant Episcopal Church, Callyhan-Robinson tomb, hammer | Click Here | Educator | Catholic University of America |
| 1838-1878 Charles Morgan Coit | Civil War, Aide to General Joseph Hawley, Second Congregational Church | Click Here | Banker | Congregational Church |
| 1838-1912 Lewis J. Saxton | cabinet maker, Clinton Mills, Saxton Woolen Corporation on Yantic River | Click Here | Manufacturer | Clinton Mills Co. |
| 1841-1923 Emil Welte | automatic self-playing organ, Second Congregational Church | Click Here | Organ maker | M. Welte & Son |
| 1850-1935 Adams P. Carroll | mill and manufacturing supply company, Central Baptist Church Norwich Ct | Click Here | Businessman | L.W. Carroll & Son |
| 1872-1955 Carl Michael Welte | organ builder | Click Here | Businessman | M. Welte & Son |
| 1880-1923 James Dana Coit | Norwich Tuberculosis Fund of the American Red Cross, Park Congregational Church | Click Here | Banker | American Red Cross in Norwich |
In the early 1800s, the area around the Norwich Falls became the center of manufacturing. Four astute businessmen moved into Norwich at this time and transformed the Falls area: Calvin Goddard, William Williams, William C. Gilman, and, later, his friend William P. Greene. As a direct result of their efforts, by 1833, the Falls area was booming with a large cotton mill, two paper mills, an iron factory, a nail factory, and a rolling mill. Their early success paved the way for others as capital was reinvested in the Norwich area. By the mid-1800s, Norwich excelled in transportation systems. Earlier turnpikes and steamship lines were joined by railroads, which linked Norwich factories and their products to New England states and western markets. The entire Norwich area continued to prosper and grow as more mills and factories came online. By 1862, Norwich-based companies produced cotton, woolen, and silk products to an extent never seen before.
Norwich was also well-represented on the state and national scenes during the Civil War. Three residents held positions of great prominence. William A. Buckingham was the Governor of Connecticut, Lafayette S. Foster was the acting Vice President following Lincoln’s death, and David Wells was in charge of financing the Civil War. Many residents of Norwich became wealthy as a result of the Civil War. The Two Hundred Fiftieth anniversary booklet issued by the Norwich Board of Trade lists the names of “Sixty leading men on point of wealth in 1865.”
John Fox Slater led the list with an annual income of $104,269, a substantial sum, especially considering that this was a time before income taxes and the average worker earned $200 a year. Lorenzo Blackstone was second with $41,246, and Governor Buckingham was third with an annual income of $39,968. Prosperity and growth continued for Norwich well into the 1900s as companies diversified their product lines and found new markets.