Thank you Mr. & Mrs. Leo Charette for creating such beautiful scenery at Rachel's Monument in honor of the Unborn Children in the Fall of 2020.
If you are trying to locate a loved one in St. Joseph Cemetery in Plainville we can help you with that.
The office is happy to provide you with cemetery maps that pinpoint exactly where your loved one is buried. Please call the office at 860-747-6825 in advance of your visit and we will prepare the maps for you. Please note that the office is open Monday - Thursday from 9 a.m. - 4 p.m.; Friday 9 a.m. - 12:30 p.m., afternoons by appointment only. The office is not open on the weekend.
The address of St. Joseph Cemetery is 169 Farmington Ave., Plainville, CT. It is located right next to the YMCA. It is also known as Route 10. The Cemetery Office is located at 19 South Canal Street, Plainville, CT, 06062.
Office Hours : 9 a.m. - 4 p.m., Mon. - Thurs.; 9 a.m. - 12:30 p.m., Fri.
Friday Afternoons by appointment only
Please call 860-747-6825 or email at Administration@olmct.org with any inquiries.
St. Joseph’s Cemetery
Plainville, CT – 860-747-6825
The following rules and regulations are adopted for St. Joseph Cemetery in Plainville, CT effective June 1, 2020, and supersede any previous rules and regulations. These rules have been updated from the November 1, 1988 rules and regulations.
Knowing of our mutual desire to have a well-kept cemetery, please follow the rules and regulations that follow. Cemeteries, like homes and neighborhoods, can be beautiful and attractive, or cluttered and untidy. This appearance depends in part on the regulations. Only by your cooperation and adherence to these rules and by our strict enforcement we can attain our common goal. Please do not ask for exceptions.
Many people visit the Cemetery; therefore, it is very difficult to control the activity of every visitor. We regret we cannot guarantee flowers from damage or disappearance.
Perhaps you have asked the question “Why be buried in a Catholic Cemetery?” There are many reasons to be buried in holy ground. Our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit. Washed in the waters of Baptism, anointed with Holy Chrism and nourished by the Bread of Life, in the Eucharist, we are initiated into the community of the Church. We share in the Divine Life and are united with the Lord and to our brothers and sisters in the Communion of Saints. United to the Community of Faith in life, would we not want to be buried with those with whom we have shared the life of faith?
Throughout our Judeo-Christian history we are reminded of the importance of being buried with our family of faith. In Genesis23:ff, Sarah is buried with her forebears. The burial of Jacob is recorded in Genesis 50:ff and the burial of Joseph is recorded in Exodus 13:ff. When we look at the burial of the Lord Jesus we see that he was not buried in the grave dug for a stranger, but rather the tomb of his friend Joseph of Arimathea. That spirit of communion with our forbears is known as the Communion of Saints.
Small wonder then that Christians wanted to be buried with other Christians in the shadow of the church. To be buried next to the place where the Eucharist is celebrated and received was a visible sign of continuing communion with the Church. On the death of the Emperor Theodosius, St. Ambrose prayed, “Give perfect rest to thy servant Theodosius….where he cannot feel the sting of death, where he knows that this death is not the end of nature but of error….” What a wonderful thought for all who have died.
Images of life have always been a part of the “religious feel” of a Catholic Cemetery. From images of the Good Shepherd with a lamb on his shoulders, to images of Lazarus being raised from the dead, to angels knocking at a tomb these images are wide spread in Catholic Cemeteries. All are life affirming and a reassurance of the Resurrection of the dead for all believers.
Prayer too is an important part of being buried in a Catholic Cemetery. Many people visit the graves of their loved ones, decorating them with flowers and votive lights.
Finally, the grounds are wonderfully maintained and individual graves treated with respect. The well-kept grounds remind us of the Heavenly Jerusalem to which we are called. That is why the removal of flowers that have died and other decorations that are weather worn help to maintain the dignity and holiness of the sacred space. As a result, we are then able to pray, “Requiscat in Pace” Rest in Peace.
—By Fr. David Baranowski