Results for Union Cemetery
Union Cemetery
First burial here as early as 1808. Cemetery chartered in ...
Forest Hill Union Cemetery
On March 20, 1868, the Ohio General Assembly passed a revi...
Union Hill Cemetery, Union Hill Methodist Episcopal Church, Unio
This cemetery is the final resting place of many of Shades...
Union Hill Cemetery
Union Hill Cemetery is the burial grounds of many pioneers...
Union Church Cemetery
To glorify God
and to honor those who rest he...
Union Cemetery War Memorial
In memory
of our dead heroes
soldiers, sailors...
Anti-Slaveholding Union Baptist Cemetery
This early Williamson County graveyard has been referred t...
Zion Union Cemetery
Eighty-eight African Americans from Mercersburg volunteere...
Cemetery of Union Church
1755
Cemetery of Union Church for which the Town an...
Union Baptist Church And Cemetery
Union Baptist Church was organized in 1834 by 18 or 20 mem...
Results for Union Cemetery
Union Cemetery
First burial here as early as 1808. Cemetery chartered in 1856. Here lie three Governors of Pennsylvania and their wives - Andrew Gregg Curtin (1815-1894), who served 1861-67, and Katharine Wilson Curtin (1821-1903); James Addams Beaver (1837-1914), who served 1887-91, ...
Forest Hill Union Cemetery
On March 20, 1868, the Ohio General Assembly passed a revision to the Ohio Revised Code allowing for a municipality and a township to join together in purchasing land for a shared cemetery. On April 24, 1868, the Washington Township ...
Union Hill Cemetery, Union Hill Methodist Episcopal Church, Unio
This cemetery is the final resting place of many of Shades Valley's pioneer residents. A few of the earliest headstones date from the mid-1850s. Descendants of these settlers helped mold the cities of Mountain Brook and Homewood. Located on property ...
Union Hill Cemetery
Union Hill Cemetery is the burial grounds of many pioneers and early settlers of the Shades Valley area. It was established in the 1870s. but includes gravestones dating back to the early 1850s due to the relocation of two earlier, ...
Union Church Cemetery
To glorify God
and to honor those who rest here
many of whom were members of
Union Church
established in 1825
Land given by Isaac Carter
Union Church burned in 1854
Since then it has been commonly called
“Burnt Church”
Placed in 1999 as a tribute ...
Union Cemetery War Memorial
In memory
of our dead heroes
soldiers, sailors and marines
of all wars.
U.S.A.
Marker is on Old NY 218 north of Cemetery Road, on the right when traveling north.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Anti-Slaveholding Union Baptist Cemetery
This early Williamson County graveyard has been referred to as Smalley Cemetery due to its connection with the family of pioneer Baptist preacher Freeman Smalley. Early settlers of this area, the Smalleys were associated with the nearby Anti-Slaveholding Union Baptist ...
Zion Union Cemetery
Eighty-eight African Americans from Mercersburg volunteered to defend the Union during the Civil War. At least 36 of those veterans lie in Mercersburg Zion Union Cemetery, established in 1876 by local Black citizens.
By 1850 Mercersburg had 26 freedman households. Many ...
Cemetery of Union Church
1755
Cemetery of Union Church for which the Town and County of Union S.C. are named
Erected by Fair Forest Chapter D.A.R.
1917
Marker is on Paula Circle, on the left.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Union Baptist Church And Cemetery
Union Baptist Church was organized in 1834 by 18 or 20 members from Canaan Church. The Libscomb area was then known as East End. Members of the Rockett and Ware families donated the original two acreas of this site and ...