Old Soldier’s Lot
I drove to the Framingham Cemetery to discover the stone monument marking a section known as the Old Soldier’s Lot. Monuments like this quietly ask us to stop and remember.

At the top of the plaque are the words: “This tablet in honor of John Nixon“. The monument recognized John Nixon, a Framingham native who played an important role in the early years of the American Revolutionary War. Nixon first served as captain of the Framingham Minute Men and marched when the fighting began at the Battles of Lexington and Concord in April 1775. He later rose to the rank of colonel and fought at the Battle of Bunker Hill, eventually becoming a brigadier general in the Continental Army and serving in campaigns that included fighting around Saratoga.
Below his name on the tablet are two more members of the Nixon family; his brother Thomas Nixon also served in the Revolutionary forces and became a colonel in his brother’s brigade. Beneath him appeared Thomas Nixon, Jr, who also served in the Revolutionary Army, showing that service to the new nation extended across generations of the same family.
The monument stands within the Old Burying Ground where many of Framingham’s earliest residents are buried. Historians estimate that nearly ninety veterans of the Revolutionary War rest in this cemetery, making it one of the town’s most significant landscapes. Among them is Peter Salem, a formerly enslaved man from Framingham who fought in several major battles of the Revolution, including Bunker Hill. After the war he returned to the town where he spent the rest of his life.
Today this quiet cemetery preserves their memory of these men who left their homes and farms to take part in the struggle for independence.
Read More From Nancy
Thomas Eames Sign
Driving along a road in Framingham is this roadside sign that marks the location where the home of Thomas Eames once stood. There is no remaining structure, only the sign indicating that this was the site of a 17th century homestead. On February 1, 1676, during the King Philip’s War, the Eames house was attacked. At […]
Henry Knox in Framingham
In Framingham, Massachusetts, there stands a granite block bearing an inscription that is easy to pass by without a second glance. Yet the words carved into this stone marks one of the most daring feats of the American Revolution: “Through this place passed Henry Knox in the winter of 1775–1776 to deliver to General George Washington […]
Framingham History Center
The home of the Framingham History Center is as much a historical artifact as the collections inside. The Center is housed in the former Edgell Memorial Library, a late 19th century structure that was completed in 1898. It was constructed as a public library through a private gift from philanthropist George Loring Edgell. This was an era when […]