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This list of cemeteries in Kentucky includes currently operating, historical (closed for new interments), and defunct (graves abandoned or removed) cemeteries, columbaria, and mausolea which are historical and/or notable.
Bellevue Cemetery is a historic cemetery in Danville, Kentucky. [2] It was established in the 1840s and was originally named Danville City Cemetery. [3] The Danville National Cemetery is located within Bellevue Cemetery. [1] The federal government purchased 18 lots within Bellevue Cemetery at the beginning of the American Civil War.
The Frankfort Cemetery is a historic rural cemetery located on East Main Street in Frankfort, Kentucky. The cemetery is the burial site of Daniel Boone , the famed frontiersman, and contains the graves of other famous Americans including seventeen Kentucky governors and a Vice President of the United States .
Specifically, Kentucky Revised Statute 367.97524 (2) states cremated remains shall be placed in a grave, crypt or niche, such as that of a columbarium for storing funeral urns. They may also be ...
The national cemetery site is located in the north-west corner and containing 0.3-acre (0.12 ha). It consists of 18 cemetery lots laid off in the form of a rectangle. Near the center of the north side is a bronze plaque inscribed with "Danville National Cemetery" and the seal of the Veterans Administration (now the Department of Veterans ...
In 1935, Marguerite Stetter, of Bellevue, Kentucky purchased the old Tom Cody Estate on the Dixie Highway for use as a cemetery. In January 1937, the first burial took place at Forest Lawn. The absence of large grave markers and monuments made Forest Lawn unique in the 1930s. The cemetery was built as a "garden."
The Church at Good Spring was organized in the year 1842 on the third Saturday in February by Elders Jesse Moon, R.T. Gardner and William Skaggs with the following members: Brown Blair, Mary Blair, Isaac Blair, Lucy Blair, David Blair, Betsy Blair, J.L. Smith, Sarah Smith, Rachel Pace, William Skaggs, J.D. Sanders, Sally Sanders, Thomsas Meredith, Esaline Smith and Pega Davis.
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