This Graveyard Pays Homage to Long-Lost Rhody Icons

Smithfield resident Joshua Patenaude uses his artistic skills in a novel way, just in time for spooky season.
Rockypoint Bennys
Perhaps two of the most iconic landmarks to ever grace Rhode Island. Photo courtesy of Joshua Patenaude.

A Smithfield man is memorializing long-lost Ocean State icons with a nostalgic graveyard in his front yard, just in time for Halloween.

The first gravestone was for Benny’s (R.I.P.), complete with the swirling red script that served as its logo since 1924. That was in 2021. Now Joshua Patenaude has nine such tablets in his yard, paying homage to lost institutions like Rocky Point and Ann & Hope.

 

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“I thought it was a cool way to pay respects in a creative way that hopefully everyone else could enjoy,” he says.

It takes him about three to four hours to craft a stone, from start to finish, from drawing out the logo, carving the foam tablets with a hot knife and painting on details. The building engineer has always been artistic, so it’s relatively easy for him to sketch out strikingly similar logos to the ones once seen on myriad Almacs and Blockbuster stores. He was young when it was still open, but he fondly remembers Rocky Point Park and riding on the Corkscrew and the Skyliner.

He’s always getting suggestions for gravestones, but his newest design might just be the most bittersweet: the PawSox, who left Pawtucket and McCoy Stadium behind when the team moved to Worcester, Massachusetts, after the 2020 season.

“It pulls at a lot of heartstrings,” he says. “These are places we grew up with and enjoyed.”

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