Arts, Culture, and Entertainment

  • 6/28 Museum Program: Hartfords Ancient Burying Ground

    The Connecticut State Museum of Natural History and Museum of Connecticut History at the Connecticut State Library present “What We Can Learn from Old Gravestones: Hartford’s Ancient Burying Ground.” The program will be lead by Ruth Shapleigh-Brown of the Connecticut Gravestone Network and will be held on Saturday, June 28, 10 am to 12 noon in Hartford, CT.

    Historic cemeteries are found throughout Connecticut, their old gravestones offering clues about the lives of people who helped establish our present-day communities. Who carved these old stones, where did they come from, what does their symbolism mean, and how did that symbolism change over time?

    Join Ruth Shapleigh-Brown, Executive Director of the Connecticut Gravestone Network, and discover what old gravestones reveal about our history. Learn what genealogists should know when looking for their ancestors’ burial places—all is not as it appears. You will never look at history and old cemeteries in the same way again. The program will begin with a presentation, and will be followed by a hike exploring Hartford’s Ancient Burying Ground, the oldest historic site in Hartford, which dates back to the 1600s.  

    The program fee is $15, $10 for Museum members. Advance registration is required. This program is for adults and children ages 10 and above. Children must be accompanied by an adult. For further information visit http://www.cac.uconn.edu/mnhcurrentcalendar.html or call 860.486.4460.

    Presented by the Museum of Connecticut History at the Connecticut State Library, and Connecticut State Museum of Natural History and Connecticut Archaeology Center, part of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at UConn.

    For more information, contact: Natural History Museum at 860.486.4460