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Newton Cemetery A Quiet Place to Walk in All Seasons
Author Thelma Fleishman has written The History of the Newton Cemetery. It is an engaging story, rich in information, starting with the good works of twelve Newton residents. The Newton Cemetery Association was organized in 1855. This group and those who followed them were thoughtful and generous community leaders. In 1860 the Board of Trustees formally adopted the name “The Newton Cemetery.” It was designed as a landscaped garden following the example of the Mt. Auburn Cemetery. They expanded the size and services of The Newton Cemetery and hired Mr. Henry Ross as Superintendent, who served with distinction for thirty-nine years. He was closely associated with The Massachusetts Horticultural Society. He and his staff made many improvements over the years. The introduction of perpetual care did much to insure the proper maintenance of individual graves. In time, the Trustees changed the exclusively Anglo-Saxon Protestant requirement to purchase a plot to the present “space available to persons of all creeds, denominations and races.” Author’s Note: I wish to thank Susan Abele, Curator of Newton History Museum, for the opportunity to read Thelma Fleischman’s manuscript, which is the basis of this article. Wishing to honor Thelma for her contributions to Newton History, friends and colleagues have formed a Newton Conservators committee to prepare The History of the Newton Cemetery for publication in 2009. Thelma’s marker in The Newton Cemetery reads “Historian of Newton.” For others wishing to remember Thelma, donations in her name may be made to the Thelma Fleischman Archives Fund in care of the Newton Historical Society, 527 Washington Street, Newton, MA 02458 Frank A. Howard
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