top of page
IMG_3173.jpg

Cemeteries

Grace Episcopal Church Cemetery

This historic churchyard has burials dating back to 1704, with examples of work from many prolific stone carvers of the 18th century.

McCoun Cemetery

A small cemetery located on the corner of Sandy Hill Road and Agnes Street, this burial site is the resting place for generations of the McCoun family.

Momento Mori Cemetery

Placeholder Image

North End Burying Ground

A historic burial ground established in 1712 by the first settlers of Southampton, this cemetery was created as the Old Burying Ground on the other side of town began to reach capacity.

Old Burying Ground, Southold

The Old Burying Ground at Southold has been accepting interments from village residents since 1640, when the town was founded. This burying ground contains 20 graves dating before the 18th century, and represents an impressive array of stones carved by some of the most prolific New England stone carvers of the 17th and 18th centuries.

Placeholder Image

Old Southampton Burial Ground

The resting place of many founders of Southampton, this burying ground was in use from 1640-1897. It contains around 1700 burials, with only 47 remaining headstones.

Placeholder Image

Sagg Cemetery

Also known as Sagaponack Burying Ground. The earliest graves reportedly date back to the town's founding in the 1650's, with the earliest legible stone dating to 1686.

St. George's Manor Cemetery

The final resting place of several Revolutionary War patriots and members of George Washington's Culper spy ring. Generations of the Smith, Strong, and Brewster family members are buried here.

Sterling Cemetery

This still active cemetery was opened in 1757, and now is home to nearly 4,000 interments. It's colonial section is the resting place of members of the Moore and Youngs family, among others.

Yaphank Almshouse Cemetery

A potter's field used as a final resting place for the poor, mentally ill, and otherwise disenfranchised homeless of Suffolk County.

bottom of page