Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first burial at Green Lawn Cemetery was that of a child, Leonora Perry, on July 7, 1849. [11] The second, and first adult, was Dr. B. F. Gard on July 12. [18] The first headstone or other monument in the cemetery was erected the second week of October 1849 by William G. Deshler. It was for his wife, Olive, who had died at the age of 19.
Wesleyan Cemetery in Cincinnati, Hamilton County. Catherine Street Burying Ground in Cincinnati; Congress Green Cemetery in North Bend; Fulton-Presbyterian Cemetery in Cincinnati; NRHP-listed
All discovered remains will be reburied at Green Lawn Cemetery. [5] The R Section of the cemetery, county-owned and used for North Graveyard reburials since the 1800s, was marked with an artwork named Departed Denizens, a 32,000-lb. granite boulder with a bronze wolf sculpture atop it in 2020. The sculpture is dedicated to these early city ...
Union Cemetery (Columbus) This page was last edited on 18 May 2024, at 03:34 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4 ...
To orchestrate the project, I recruited my South Providence friend Marty Byrne, head of the Ironworkers Union, Local 37. His skilled laborers volunteered their services to remove the Man on Aug. 9 ...
The Old Franklinton Cemetery is a cemetery in the Franklinton neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio. The cemetery is the oldest in Central Ohio, established in 1799. Other names for it include the Franklinton Cemetery or Pioneer Burying Ground. Franklinton founder Lucas Sullivant was buried there initially, later reinterred in Green Lawn Cemetery. [1 ...
Union Cemetery is a historic cemetery on Olentangy River Road near Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. Owing to its location near the Ohio State University , it has been the chosen resting place for numerous Buckeye luminaries and Columbus politicians.
The cemetery was established in part to replace the old St. Patrick's Cemetery, which was located in downtown Columbus and had become encircled by the city's growth. [4] A plot of just over 25 acres (10 ha) of land, outside the city's original limits, was purchased in 1865 by John F. Zimmer in trust for the Diocese of Columbus, and burials on the site also began that year. [1]