LATEST NEWS
OLCA Restoration Featured in Lymeline
On September 14, 2024, the Old Lyme Cemetery Association reinstalled a small headstone at the historic Meetinghouse Hill Cemetery, established in 1696..
Duck River Cemetery Fence Restoration
In the fall of 2023 the the original stone post and iron bar fence surrounding Duck River Cemetery was restored.
Prince Griswold Crosley Honored by the Sons of the American Revolution
The Connecticut Society of the Sons of the American Revolution held a color guard ceremony at Duck River Cemetery on Saturday, May 2, 2024, to honor the African American Patriot Prince Crosley.
Duck River Restoration Project Featured in Lymeline.
Our restoration efforts were featured in an April 2024 Lymeline article. Learn more about our efforts and how you can join in.
Duck River July Restoration Workparty
On July 23, our volunteers were once again working in the Ancient section of the cemetery, uncovering inscriptions hidden by moss and dirt and discovering footstones that have be buried for years.
Repairing Phebe M. Greenfield’s Monumnen
On the morning of June 11, 2023, the Duck River Cemetery restoration team met to reset, mend, and stabilize the gravestone of Phebe M. Greenfield, in the Ancient Section of the cemetery.
Boy Scouts Honor Veterans in Duck River Cemetery
Members of Boy Scout Troop 26 gathered at Duck River Cemetery on May 25, 2023, to place 500 new flags at the gravesites of Old Lyme veterans prior to the May 29 Memorial Day ceremony.
Duck River Restoration Resumes
On May 21, volunteers cleaned 30 gravestones, excavated five, straightened five, and reset one mended stone.
Old Lyme Historical Society Tours Duck River Cemetery
On October 22, some 25 members of the Old Lyme Historical Society gathered on a spectacular autumn afternoon for a tour of Duck River Cemetery led by Jim Lampos and Michaele Pierson.
Fall Restoration at Duck River Cemetery
Work parties held in the Ancient section of the Duck River Cemetery in August and September made significant progress in cleaning, mending, and resetting damaged gravestones.
Duck River Restoration, June 26, 2022
The Old Lyme Memorial Day Parade took place on Monday, May 30, and ended in the Duck River Cemetery with a ceremony hosted by VFW Post 1467 to honor the country’s fallen Veterans
Witness Stones at Duck River Cemetery
Witness Stones placed beside the Duck River Cemetery’s gates on June 3, 2022, commemorate three African Americans and one Native American who labored in servitude nearby on Meeting House Hill (today’s Johnny Cake Hill).
African American Burials at Duck River
Between 1670 and 1820 more than 200 African Americans lived enslaved in the Lyme region. Eight who labored for decades in servitude are commemorated by gravestones in the Duck River Cemetery.
A Solitary Gravestone in South Lyme
For more than 250 years a solitary gravestone has stood on the north side of today’s Shore Road, adjacent to the Old Lyme Land Trust’s Goberis-Chadwick Preserve. Seven fieldstones scattered in the immediate area suggest that others, their names and dates unknown, were buried nearby.
Old Lyme Memorial Day Celebration 2022
The Old Lyme Memorial Day Parade took place on Monday, May 30, and ended in the Duck River Cemetery with a ceremony hosted by VFW Post 1467 to honor the country’s fallen Veterans
Duck River Cemetery Restoration
Beginning in September 2021, volunteers have been working in the Ancient Section of the Duck River Cemetery to preserve and restore early gravestones.