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William Haines Lytle was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the scion of the affluent Lytle family. [1] He graduated from Cincinnati College and studied law. After passing the bar exam, he established a law firm in Cincinnati, but soon enlisted in the 2nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry and served as a captain in the Mexican–American War.
The Mount Olivet Cemetery was established by Adrian Van Sinderen Lindsley and John Buddeke in 1856. [1] It was modelled after the Mount Auburn Cemetery. [1] In the 1870s, a chapel designed in the Gothic Revival architectural style by Hugh Cathcart Thompson was built as an office.
Spring Grove Cemetery and Arboretum is a nonprofit rural cemetery and arboretum located at 4521 Spring Grove Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio.At a size of 733 acres (2.97 km2), it is the third largest cemetery in the United States, after the Calverton National Cemetery and Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery. [2]
The Lytle family was a prominent American family that played significant roles in the settlement and development of Kentucky and Ohio from the late 18th to the mid-19th centuries. The family's prominence began with Captain William Lytle (1728–1797), who led settlers to Kentucky in 1780.
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Lytle was the owner of Cornsilk, a historic house in Cross Plains, Tennessee, in the 1940s. [5] He died on December 13, 1995, in Monteagle, Tennessee. [1]Lytle Street in Murfreesboro is named after his ancestor William Lytle, of Hillsboro, N.C. who served in the Sixth, First, and Fourth regiments of the North Carolina Line during the Revolutionary War.
Lytle enrolled at the University of Michigan in 1973 and played college football as a tailback and fullback for Bo Schembechler's Michigan Wolverines football teams from 1973 to 1976. [3] As a sophomore in 1974, Lytle was the Wolverines' second leading rusher with 802 yards on 140 carries for an average of 5.7 yards per carry. [4]
William Lytle may refer to: William Lytle (captain) (1728–1797), officer in the Continental Army during the American Revolution; William Lytle II (died 1831), his son, Surveyor General of Illinois; William Haines Lytle (1826–1864), his nephew, Ohioan poet and politician; William Lytle, father of Rob Lytle, American football player