Coddington Cemetery
| Coddington Cemetery | |
|---|---|
|  Entrance from Farewell Street | |
| Details | |
| Established | 1647 | 
| Location | |
| Country | United States | 
| Type | Denominational (Quaker) | 
| Owned by | Private | 
| No. of graves | 93 | 
| Find a Grave | Coddington Cemetery | 
The Coddington Cemetery is an early colonial cemetery located in Newport, Rhode Island. It is sometimes called the Friends' Burial Ground, and has more colonial governors buried in it than any other cemetery in the state.
Description

The Coddington Cemetery at 34 Farewell Street is a very old colonial cemetery with 93 known interments, and has the largest number of interred colonial governors of any cemetery in the state, including William Coddington, Nicholas Easton, William Coddington, Jr., Henry Bull, John Easton, and John Wanton, all Quakers. None of the governor's graves has a governor's medallion like those found at the gravesites of most other colonial governors. The first known interment in this cemetery was that of Mary Moseley Coddington, the wife of Governor William Coddington, who died in 1647, and the last interment was that of James Easton who died in 1796.
The cemetery has been designated as Rhode Island Historic Cemetery, Newport #9, and is located on Farewell Street between Baptist and Coddington Streets in Newport. Within the cemetery is a monument honoring Governor William Coddington, erected on the 200th anniversary of the founding of Newport. The monument reads:
THIS MONUMENT
 Erected by the Town of Newport
 on the 12th. day of May 1839 being
 the second Centeniel Anniversary
 of the settlement of this town:
 
To the memory of
 WILLIAM CODDINGTON ESQ
 That illustrious man, who
 first purchased this Island
 from the Narragansett Sachems
 Canonicus and Miantunomo
 for and on account of himself and
 Seventeen others his associates
 in the purchase and Settlement.
 He presided many years
 as chief Magistrate of the Island
 and Colony of Rhode Island
 and Died much respected and lamented
 on the 1st day of November in [1678]
 [last line illegible] 
Image gallery
-  			 Cemetery, looking north with Farewell Street to right front Cemetery, looking north with Farewell Street to right front
-  			 Gov. William Coddington grave marker Gov. William Coddington grave marker
-  			 Grave marker for Gov. Nicholas Easton and his son Peter Grave marker for Gov. Nicholas Easton and his son Peter
-  			 Grave marker for Gov. William Coddington, Jr. Grave marker for Gov. William Coddington, Jr.
-  			 Grave monument for Gov. Henry Bull and his wives Grave monument for Gov. Henry Bull and his wives
-  			 Slab marking grave of Gov. John Easton Slab marking grave of Gov. John Easton
-  			 Worn inscription on Gov. John Easton slab Worn inscription on Gov. John Easton slab
See also
- Category:Burials at Coddington Cemetery