Building Provincetown 2020

A building-by-building history of and guide to Provincetown.

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24 Cemetery Road

Benjamin Huldah Dyer (1833-1907). B. H. Dyer & Company, a hardware, houseware and paint store and one of the last Continue reading →

24 Cemetery Road

Capt. William H. Dyer (±1857-1887). Lot No. 271 is a large gathering of family: one monument, eight stones, and five Continue reading →

24 Cemetery Road

Hannah Elliott (±1817-1842). The lovely draped funerary urn on this gravestone in Lot No. 343 masks great sorrow. Hannah Elliott, Continue reading →

24 Cemetery Road

Dale N. Elmer (1929-2015). Lovely as it is, Elmer’s epitaph — “A True Artist, Creative Jeweler and Sculptor, Much Loved Continue reading →

24 Cemetery Road

Kenneth B. Felton (1962-2001). As the grandson of Mildred and Wesley Felton, who owned the Cottage Restaurant at 149 Commercial Continue reading →

24 Cemetery Road

William Freed (1902-1984). For more than half of a century, Freed and Lillian Orlowsky (1914-2007) shared their lives and their Continue reading →

24 Cemetery Road

Nathan Freeman (1797-1876).   The central monument in Lot No. 167 — an obelisk topped by a funerary urn — Continue reading →

24 Cemetery Road

John J. Gaspie (1884-1961). “Lord Protector of the Quahogs,” was what the legendary chef Howard Mitcham called Gaspie, the town’s Continue reading →

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