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Results for Rose Cemetery

Rosehill Cemetery

Rosehill Cemetery opened in 1859 on Roe's Hill, land owned by resident and local tavern owner Hiram Roe. City Cemetery had been Chicago's central burying ground until the city decided in the 1860s to turn it into Lincoln Park. To ...

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Rosemary Cemetery

Restored marble headstones and a historical marker at the intersection of Pine Ridge Road and the Tamiami Trail identify Rosemary Cemetery, Naples' primary burial ground until 1947. The cemetery was platted in 1934 to re-inter the remains of the first ...

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Rose Cemetery

Rose Cemetery, formerly known as Rose Hill Cemetery was a segregated burial site built in the 1800s. Ground-penetrating radar has identified the grave of J. Richard Quarls, honored for his service by the Sons of Confederate Veterans because he joined ...

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Roseville Plantation Slave And Freedman's Cemetery / Clarke Ceme

Roseville Plantation Slave And Freedman's Cemetery

This was originally the slave cemetery for Roseville Plantation. Roseville, established about 1771 by the Dewitt family, was later owned by the Brockinton, Bacot, and Clarke families from the 1820s through the Civil War. ...

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Rosemary Cemetery

Opened in 1931, Rosemary Cemetery was originally established on twenty acres of land given by Edward W. Crayton, a prominent Naples citizen and president of the Naples Improvement Company. It served as the town's only cemetery until 1955. The graves ...

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Rose Hill Cemetery

....North and South Reunited For Eternity

Some of the Civil War notables buried here in Rose Hill Include:

Mary Landon Mason Alexander (1861-1946)- Second wife of Confederate General Edward Porter Alexander.

Bvt.

Brigadier General George Bell, USA (1828-1907) - Prominent officer in the ...

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Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery

A burial ground before 1847, this graveyard became an Army post cemetery in the 1860s. It is the final resting place for most who fell at San Pasqual in 1846, and for the USS Bennington victims of 1905. It became ...

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Rose Cemetery

Rose Cemetery, also known as Rose Hill Cemetery, established in the early 1900s as a segregated cemetery, is the oldest African-American cemetery in Pinellas County. Located on approximately five acres of land, the cemetery reflects the social history and cultural ...

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Confederate Dead Monument - Thornrose Cemetery

West Panel:

Honor to the Brave

870 Lie Here

Recorded by Name, Company & Regiment:

From

Virginia 385, N. Carolina 176, S. Carolina 59,

Georgia 208, Alabama 49, Florida 8,

Mississippi 11, Louisiana 19, Tennessee 12,

Arkansas 20, Texas 3,

And 207

Recorded by Name Only

Confederate Dead

South Panel:

“There is True ...

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Rosewood Cemetery

Galveston's first

African American cemetery

1911-1944

Site donated to

Galveston Historical Foundation

by John and Judy Saracco, 2006

Listed as a historical burial ground

by the Texas Historical Commission

Marker can be reached from the intersection of Seawall Boulevard and ...

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