Towards the center of the cemetery, I came across the Bryant and Remington family plot with its large granite marker for 27-year-old Clarence S. Remington, “lost from the steamer Narragansett.”
On 11 June 1880, two sister paddle steamers collided in the fog on Long Island Sound. The SS Narragansett left the Jay Street pier in Manhattan at 5:06 pm heading towards Stonington, Connecticut, with 300 passengers. The same evening, the SS Stonington, with its 400 passengers, departed the steamer dock at Stonington heading for New York City. At 11:20 pm the two ships collided in the night. The Stonington struck the Narragansett headlong on its starboard side, gashing open the hull. The situation quickly worsened when the ship’s boiler, damaged in the impact, exploded, starting a fire which quickly engulfed the steamer.
The lives of approximately 50 of the Narragansett’s passengers were lost in the disaster, though it took weeks to determine the missing and even today the true number of victims remains uncertain. The Stonington, with a heavily damaged bow, was able to return to its port having suffered no casualties aboard.
In its coverage of the survivors, the Globe reported that Mr. Remington had been separated from his wife and had gone to New York to get her, perhaps hopeful thinking on the part of Mrs. Remington. Unfortunately, it was not the case. In late July, the body of an unknown man was found floating in the waters off Fishers Island and buried on the beaches of Noank, Connecticut. Presumed to be a victim of the SS Narragansett, the body was identified as Clarence S. Remington on 2 August; his body was returned home to Burrillville, where he was buried alongside his children in Harrisville Cemetery. Susie Remington remarried Edwin Roscoe Bryant in in 1884; together they would later also be buried in the family plot in Harrisville.