Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Lakeside Cemetery Chapel is a historic chapel in Lakeside Cemetery, on North Avenue in Wakefield, Massachusetts. The stone chapel, built 1913, is one of a few Neo-Gothic buildings in the town. Roughly resembling English country churches, the building has a steeply pitched slate roof, with sidewalls containing supporting buttresses.
Lakeside Cemetery may refer to: Lakeside Cemetery (Port Huron, Michigan), cemetery in United States; Lakeside Cemetery (Hamburg, New York), cemetery in United States; Carpenter, Lakeside, and Springvale Cemeteries, cemeteries in East Providence, Rhode Island, United States
This list of cemeteries in Michigan includes currently operating, historical (closed for new interments), and defunct (graves abandoned or removed) cemeteries, columbaria, and mausolea which are historical and/or notable.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Old Memorial Building and Michigan State Police Post 87 from M-28 looking east. Completed in 1924 on the south shore of Sunday Lake, the 52,000-square-foot (4,800 m 2) Wakefield Memorial Building was the center of the community. At a cost of $400,000 it was dedicated to the youth who fought in World War I.
SAULT STE. MARIE — On Monday, MyMichigan Medical Center Sault celebrated 100 years of service to the community. In 1922, the Chippewa County Board of Supervisors committed $30,000 to build a ...
The Beacon Street tomb is located on the south side of Lakeside Cemetery, itself set on the west side of Lake Quannapowitt. It faces south, away from the cemetery and toward Beacon Street, which runs along the cemetery's southern border. It is a single-story stone structure, built out of ashlar granite and covered by a front-facing gabled roof ...
Thomaston is an unincorporated community in the township a few miles north of Wakefield at A post office opened November 7, 1891 and was discontinued July 31, 1923. The office reopened and operated from January 12, 1925, until August 14, 1926.