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Calvary Cemetery is a Catholic cemetery in Maspeth and Woodside, Queens, in New York City, New York, United States. With about three million burials, [ 1 ] it has the largest number of interments of any cemetery in the United States.
Calvary Cemetery is a Roman Catholic cemetery in Cleveland, Ohio, in the United States. The cemetery straddles the border between Cleveland and the city of Garfield Heights, with its offices within the city limits of Cleveland. Calvary Cemetery is the largest Catholic cemetery in Cleveland, and one of the largest in Ohio.
Mount Calvary Cemetery in the West Hills of Portland, Oregon, United States, is a private cemetery owned and maintained by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon. It is the second-oldest Catholic cemetery in Multnomah County , and was the third cemetery built in the West Hills.
Calvary Cemetery is a Roman Catholic cemetery that the Archdiocese of Los Angeles runs in the community of East Los Angeles, California. It is also called "New Calvary Cemetery" because it succeeded the original Calvary Cemetery (on north Broadway), over which Cathedral High School was built.
Calvary Cemetery opened for burials in 1854, with Archbishop Kenrick as its first president. [citation needed] Prior to the establishment of Calvary Cemetery, parts of the Clay farm had served as a burial place for Native Americans and soldiers from nearby Fort Bellefontaine. After 1854, these remains were reinterred in a mass grave under a ...
Calvary Cemetery (Evanston, Illinois) Calvary Cemetery (South Portland, Maine) Calvary Cemetery (St. Louis), Missouri; Calvary Cemetery (Queens), New York; Calvary Cemetery (Cleveland), Ohio; Calvary Cemetery (Youngstown, Ohio) Calvary Catholic Cemetery (Enid, Oklahoma) Calvary Catholic Cemetery (Pittsburgh), Pennsylvania
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Calvary Cemetery is a Roman Catholic cemetery in Seattle, Washington, United States, located in the Ravenna/Bryant neighborhood. Dedicated on December 1, 1889, it is situated on the southwest slope of a hill overlooking University Village, about a mile (1.6 km) northeast of the University of Washington.