Details
Training Field Triangle
Training Field & Old Comers Rds.
Chatham, MA
Plaque Content:
The Training Field triangle, now a town conservation property, has served many different uses throughout
the history of Chatham. When Chatham was settled in 1664,
much of the land was slowly cleared for agriculture. Map records indicate this parcel was cleared and periodically
used for farming as well as for training the colonial
militia. As for its odd shape, records indicate that cart paths have long designated the property's triangular bounds.
One past use of the property is still evident today,
the smallpox cemetery from the mid-1700s you see before you. Smallpox ravaged Chatham from November 1765 to May 1766,
forcing businesses and schools to
close and claiming 37 of the town's 678 lives. There is debate as to how smallpox reached Cape Cod. Some accounts indicate
the disease was carried by a bale of
cotton shipped from the South. Others believe it was brought over by sailors from the West Indies or soldiers returning
from the frontier. Although this smallpox
cemetery was formed during the outbreak- few were buried in it due to fears of spreading the disease during funerals.
Most victims were buried quietly without a funeral service on family farms.
A major figure in the history of smallpox in Chatham is Dr. Samuel Lord, a doctor who faithfully treated his patients
during Chatham's smallpox epidemic. Before
the epidemic ceased, Dr. Lord contracted the disease and died in January 1766. Dr. Lord's resting place, northeast of
Training Field Triangle alongside Training Field
Road, is characteristic of a grave made in the time of great sickness His simple, undignified grave marker was
replaced by a new headstone, commissioned in the
1950s. It describes the doctor's valiant service and is symbolic of all who suffered through a devastating time in
Chatham's history.