Albert Whiting
23 Feb 1810 – 23 Sep 1891 · Master mason and builder
A master mason and builder of Liberty Plain, married into the Fearings; the memorial chapel that still stands in this cemetery was raised by his son in his memory.
Albert Whiting was born in Boston on the 23rd of February, 1810, the son of Perez Whiting, and came to be one of the builders of South Hingham, a master mason and contractor whose work stood up around the village he lived in. The 1893 History of Hingham records him on Main Street at Liberty Plain, the same road where the Fearing family kept its house and forge.
On the 24th of October, 1832, he married Sarah Gilkey Fearing, a daughter of the blacksmith Ezekiel Fearing and Anna Cushing Fearing. His was one of four such marriages in a single generation: his brother Charles married Sarah’s sister Anna; his first cousin Amasa Whiting married another sister, Hannah Lincoln Fearing; and a fourth sister, Olive Cushing Fearing, married Benjamin S. Whiting. Two families along one street became, in effect, one.
Albert and Sarah’s children carried the line forward and, in one case, cut it short: a son who lived only three years in the 1830s; their daughter Sarah Henrietta, who married into the Caryls; and their eldest, Albert Turner Whiting. It was Albert Turner who, in 1905, raised the stone Whiting Memorial Chapel that still stands inside this cemetery, built in memory of his parents, Albert and Sarah Fearing Whiting. The chapel is the most visible thing the family left here; the man it remembers is in the ground a short way off, and most visitors never connect the two. That connection, name, stone, and the people behind both, is the whole of what this walk is for.
View family network 10relatives, as recorded on Find a Grave
SiblingsMary Whiting Gardner1802–1832 · George Whiting1806–1823 · Winslow Lewis Whiting1813–1872
Relationships are as recorded on Find a Grave. A ✓ marks a tie the 1893 History of Hingham independently confirms.
How we know this
- Supported by published genealogy.Drawn from the 1893 History of Hingham or a family genealogy.
- Reported by Find a Grave.A lead from Find a Grave, treated as a starting point, not as proof.
- Location approximate.The grave is placed at the cemetery or field level, not a surveyed point.
- Field verification needed.Awaiting a visit to confirm the stone and its exact location.