Pine Hill Cemetery | |
---|---|
Details | |
Established | 1730 |
Location | |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 43°11′9″N70°52′13″W / 43.18583°N 70.87028°W |
Owned by | City of Dover |
No. of graves | >20,000 |
Website | Official website |
Find a Grave | Pine Hill Cemetery |
Pine Hill Cemetery is located in Dover, New Hampshire, and was first used as a burial ground in 1730.
Following are interments of notable people:
Amherst is a town in Hillsborough County in the state of New Hampshire, United States. The population was 11,753 at the 2020 census. Amherst is home to Ponemah Bog Wildlife Sanctuary, Hodgman State Forest, the Joe English Reservation and Baboosic Lake.
John Wentworth Jr. was a Founding Father of the United States and a lawyer who served as a New Hampshire delegate to the Continental Congress, where he signed the Articles of Confederation.
John Taylor Gilman was a farmer, shipbuilder and statesman from Exeter, New Hampshire. He represented New Hampshire in the Continental Congress in 1782–1783 and was the fifth governor of New Hampshire for 14 years, from 1794 to 1805, and from 1813 to 1816.
John Love was a nineteenth-century politician and lawyer from Virginia. Decades after his death, during the American Civil War, a man of the same name served in the Wheeling Convention, representing Upshur County, West Virginia, many miles westward.
William Smith was an eighteenth- and nineteenth-century congressman from Virginia.
William Gay Brown Sr. was a nineteenth-century politician and lawyer from Virginia, who was twice elected to the Virginia General Assembly and thrice to the U.S. House of Representatives. He also served at the Virginia Constitutional Convention of 1850 and later opposed secession at the Virginia Secession Convention of 1861. A leading Unionist during the American Civil War, he became one of the founders of West Virginia.
Abijah Bigelow was a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts.
Daniel Ilsley was a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts.
Daniel Meserve Durell was an American attorney and Democratic-Republican politician in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. He served as a member of the United States House of Representatives and as a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives in the early 1800s.
Francis Carr was a U.S. Representative from the District of Maine, which was then part of Massachusetts. He was also the father of U.S. Congressman James Carr, and the founder of a political and mercantile family in Bangor, Maine.
Henry Bacon Lovering was an American politician and U.S. Representative from Massachusetts.
Jabez Upham was a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts, brother of George Baxter Upham, and cousin of Charles Wentworth Upham, both were also U.S. Representatives.
Joshua Gilman Hall was an American politician and a U.S. Representative from New Hampshire.
William Hale was an American merchant, shipowner and politician. He served as a U.S. representative from New Hampshire during the early 1800s.
Thomas Gholson Jr. was an American lawyer and politician. He represented Virginia from 1808 to 1816 in the United States House of Representatives, after serving in the Virginia House of Delegates from 1806 to 1809.
James Stephenson was an American politician and soldier who, as a Federalist, served in the Virginia House of Delegates as well as in the United States House of Representatives.
Jeremiah Smith was a United States representative for New Hampshire, United States Attorney for New Hampshire, a United States circuit judge of the United States Circuit Court for the First Circuit, the sixth governor of New Hampshire and chief justice of the New Hampshire Superior Court of Judicature and the New Hampshire Supreme Judicial Court. He was a member of the Federalist Party.