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The rural cemetery , or garden cemetery , is a style of cemetery that became popular in the United States and Europe in the mid-nineteenth century. This article is a list of rural cemeteries in the United States .
Name
Year opened
Location
Notes
Mount Auburn Cemetery
1831
Boston, Massachusetts
The first rural cemetery built in the U.S.[ 1]
Mount Hope Cemetery
1834
Bangor, Maine
Laurel Hill Cemetery
1836
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Mount Pleasant Cemetery
1836
Taunton, Massachusetts
Rose Hill Cemetery
1836
Macon, Georgia
Rural Cemetery
1837
New Bedford, Massachusetts
Monument Cemetery
1837
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
The cemetery was condemned in 1956. The land was purchased by Temple University and bodies reinterred to Lawnview Memorial Park .[ 2]
Mount Hope Cemetery
1838
Rochester, New York
Green-Wood Cemetery
1838
Brooklyn, New York
Green Mount Cemetery
1838
Baltimore, Maryland
Rural Cemetery
1838
Worcester, Massachusetts
Glendale Cemetery
1839
Akron, Ohio
Harmony Grove Cemetery
1840
Salem, Massachusetts
Valley Cemetery
1840
Manchester, New Hampshire
The Woodlands
1840
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Chelsea Garden Cemetery
1841
Chelsea, Massachusetts
Lowell Cemetery
1841
Lowell, Massachusetts
Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum
1841
Dayton, Ohio
Springfield Cemetery
1841
Springfield, Massachusetts
Mount Albion Cemetery
1843
Albion, New York
Wilmington and Brandywine Cemetery [ 3]
1843
Wilmington, Delaware
Laurel Hill Cemetery
1844
Saco, Maine
Albany Rural Cemetery
1844
Menands, New York
Frankfort Cemetery
1844
Frankfort, Kentucky
Allegheny Cemetery
1844
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Mount Pleasant Cemetery
1844
Newark, New Jersey
Spring Grove Cemetery
1844
Cincinnati, Ohio
Harrisburg Cemetery
1845
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Swan Point Cemetery
1846
Providence, Rhode Island
Elmwood Cemetery
1846
Detroit, Michigan
Forest Home Cemetery
1847
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Cave Hill Cemetery
1848
Louisville, Kentucky
Cypress Hills Cemetery
1848
New York, New York
Forest Hills Cemetery
1848
Roxbury, Massachusetts
Green Lawn Cemetery
1848
Columbus, Ohio
Lexington Cemetery
1848
Lexington, Kentucky
Oak Hill Cemetery
1848
Washington, D.C.
Oakwood Cemetery
1848
Troy, New York
Bellefontaine Cemetery
1849
St. Louis, Missouri
Boxwood Cemetery
1849
Orleans County, New York
Cemetery of the Evergreens
1849
New York, New York
Easton Cemetery
1849
Easton, Pennsylvania
Forest Lawn Cemetery
1849
Buffalo, New York
Glenwood Cemetery
1849
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
In 1938, the cemetery and all burials were relocated to Glenwood Memorial Gardens in Broomall, Pennsylvania .[ 4]
Hollywood Cemetery
1849
Richmond, Virginia
Mountain Grove Cemetery
1849
Bridgeport, Connecticut
Oak Grove Cemetery
1849
Falmouth, Massachusetts
Shawsheen Cemetery
1849
Bedford, Massachusetts
Evergreen Cemetery
1850
Boston, Massachusetts
Forest Hill Cemetery
1850
Utica, New York
Indian Hill Cemetery
1850
Middletown, Connecticut
Magnolia Cemetery
1850
Charleston, South Carolina
Graceland Cemetery
1850
Chicago, Illinois
Old Gray Cemetery
1850
Knoxville, Tennessee
Ridgewood Cemetery
1850
North Andover, Massachusetts
Cedar Grove Cemetery
1851
New London, Connecticut
Dale Cemetery
1851
Ossining, New York
Erie Cemetery
1851
Erie, Pennsylvania
Evergreen Cemetery
1851
Owego, New York
Wildwood Cemetery
1851
Winchester, Massachusetts
Elmwood Cemetery
1852
Memphis, Tennessee
Greenwood Cemetery
1852
New Orleans, Louisiana
Mount Hope Cemetery
1852
Boston, Massachusetts
Oakdale Cemetery[ 5]
1852
Wilmington, North Carolina
Swampscott Cemetery
1852
Swampscott, Massachusetts
Evergreen Cemetery
1853
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
Evergreen cemetery is part of the Gettysburg Battlefield Historic District and played a strategic role in the Battle of Gettysburg .[ 6] It was the site of the dedication of the adjacent National Cemetery. Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address from a platform in Evergreen Cemetery.[ 7] [ 8]
Greendale Cemetery
1853
Meadville, Pennsylvania
Mount Adnah Cemetery
1853
Fulton, New York
Oak Hill Cemetery
1853
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Oak Woods Cemetery
1853
Chicago, Illinois
The first burials at the cemetery did not occur until 1860.[ 9]
Poughkeepsie Rural Cemetery
1853
Poughkeepsie, New York
Riverside Cemetery
1853
Waterbury, Connecticut
Walnut Grove Cemetery
1853
Methuen, Massachusetts
Woodland Cemetery
1853
Cleveland, Ohio
Woodlawn Cemetery
1853
Clinton, Massachusetts
Chippiannock Cemetery
1854
Rock Island, Illinois
Hope Cemetery
1854
Worcester, Massachusetts
Oak Grove Cemetery
1854
Gloucester, Massachusetts
Oaklands Cemetery
1854
West Chester, Pennsylvania
Evergreen Cemetery
1855
Portland, Maine
Fairmount Cemetery
1855
Newark, New Jersey
Mount Moriah Cemetery
1855
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
The cemetery closed its gates in 2011 and had no owner after the last board member died. Philadelphia's Orphan Court appointed the Mount Moriah Cemetery Preservation Corporation as owner in 2014.[ 10]
Mount Wollaston Cemetery
1855
Quincy, Massachusetts
Oak Grove Cemetery
1855
Fall River, Massachusetts
Riverside Cemetery
1855
Oswego, New York
Sleepy Hollow Cemetery
1855
Concord, Massachusetts
Mount Vernon Cemetery
1856
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
The cemetery was placed into conservatorship in 2021 due to neglect.[ 11]
Woodward Hill Cemetery
1856
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Founded in 1850 by the Evangelical Lutheran Church of the Holy Trinity and became a non-denominational cemetery in 1856.[ 12]
Holyhood Cemetery
1857
Brookline, Massachusetts
Lake Forest Cemetery
1857
Lake Forest, Illinois
Mount Feake Cemetery
1857
Waltham, Massachusetts
Vale Cemetery
1857
Schenectady, New York
Green Hill Cemetery
1858
Amsterdam, New York
Mount Olivet Cemetery
1858
Washington, D.C.
Lindenwood Cemetery
1859
Fort Wayne, Indiana
Oakwood Cemetery
1859
Syracuse, New York
Rosehill Cemetery
1859
Chicago, Illinois
Hillside Cemetery
1860
Middletown, New York
Oak Ridge Cemetery
1860
Springfield, Illinois
Chester Rural Cemetery
1863
Chester, Pennsylvania
Crown Hill Cemetery
1863
Indianapolis, Indiana
Monongahela Cemetery
1863
Monongahela City, Pennsylvania
Mountain View Cemetery
1863
Oakland, California
Woodlawn Cemetery
1863
Bronx, New York
Dellwood Cemetery
1865
Manchester Village, Vermont
Designed by Burton A. Thomas[ 13]
Cedar Hill Cemetery
1866
Hartford, Connecticut
Hillside Cemetery
1866
Clarendon, New York
Cedar Lawn Cemetery
1867
Paterson, New Jersey
Lakeview Cemetery
1867
Burlington, Vermont
Designed by E.C. Ryer[ 14]
Woodmere Cemetery
1867
Detroit, Michigan
West Laurel Hill Cemetery
1869
Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania
Glenwood Cemetery
1871
Maynard, Massachusetts
Lakewood Cemetery[ 15]
1871
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Metairie Cemetery
1872
New Orleans, Louisiana
Cedar Grove Cemetery
1873
Chaumont, New York
Walnut Hills Cemetery
1875
Brookline, Massachusetts
Woodlawn Cemetery
1876
Toledo, Ohio
Homewood Cemetery
1878
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Highland Lawn Cemetery
1884
Terre Haute, Indiana
Fairview Cemetery
1885
Dalton, Massachusetts
Harleigh Cemetery
1885
Camden, New Jersey
Riverside Cemetery
1885
Fremont, New York
Riverside Cemetery
1887
Macon, Georgia
Lakeview Cemetery
1891
Sweden, New York
Cypress Lawn Memorial Park
1892
Colma, California
Fairview Cemetery
1892
Boston, Massachusetts
Hope Cemetery
1895
Barre, Vermont
Designed by landscape architect Edward P. Adams[ 16]
Elmwood Cemetery
1897
Kansas City, Missouri
^ Linden, Blanche M. G. (2007). Silent City on a Hill: Picturesque Landscapes of Memory and Boston's Mount Auburn Cemetery . Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press. p. 293. ISBN 978-1-55849-571-5 . Retrieved August 10, 2019 .
^ Barley, Luke. "How Thousands of Headstones Ended Up Under a Philadelphia Bridge" . www.citylab.com . Retrieved August 25, 2019 .
^ "Wilmington & Brandywine Cemetery" . www.wilmingtonbrandywinecemetery.org . Retrieved July 22, 2019 .
^ Pickard, Sam. "Glenwood: The Westward-Moving Cemetery" . www.marplehistory.com . Retrieved January 9, 2022 .
^ "Oakdale Cemetery" . www.oakdalecemetery.org . Retrieved July 22, 2019 .
^ Hawthorne, Frederick W., Gettysburg: Stories of Men and Monuments , Hanover, Pennsylvania: The Association of Licensed Battlefield Guides, 1988, p. 107.
^ Historical Marker Database. "The Gettysburg Address" . Retrieved August 10, 2019 .
^ National Park Service. "National Cemetery Walking Tour" (PDF) . Retrieved August 10, 2019 .
^ Linden, Blanche M. G. (2007). Silent City on a Hill: Picturesque Landscapes of Memory and Boston's Mount Auburn Cemetery . Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press. p. 294. ISBN 978-1-55849-571-5 . Retrieved August 10, 2019 .
^ "History" . www.friendsofmountmoriahcemetery.org . October 17, 2013. Retrieved August 25, 2019 .
^ Bender, William. "Judge ousts absentee owner of historic Mount Vernon Cemetery. Rehab could involve goats" . www.inquirer.com . Retrieved September 9, 2021 .
^ Schuyler, David (2004). "Woodward Hill Cemetery" (PDF) . National Register of Historic Places nomination form . Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission . Retrieved November 27, 2013 .
^ Cothran, James R.; Danylchak, Erica (2018). Grave Landscapes . University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 9781611177992 . Retrieved May 18, 2024 .
^ Friends of Lakeview Cemetery (October 2, 2015). "Lakeview Cemetery: More than a burial ground" . Burlington Free Press . Burlington, VT.
^ "Discover Our Proud Past" . www.lakewoodcemetery.org . Lakewood Cemetery. Retrieved May 19, 2024 .
^ "Hope cemetery Guide" . Central Vermont Chamber of Commerce . 2002. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007.
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