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After the first permanent European-American settlers arrived in Madison in the 1830s, the first non-native burials occurred on the current University of Wisconsin–Madison campus, near Bascom Hill. In the following years other areas within the area were established as informal burying grounds and the first official village cemetery was ...
Following the Battle of Island Number Ten, about 1400 Confederate soldiers who surrendered there, many from the 1st Regiment Alabama Infantry, were taken at the end of April, 1862, to the Union training field Camp Randall in Madison, Wisconsin, which was found to be unsuitable, [3] resulting in the deaths of 140 prisoners before the remaining survivors were sent to Camp Douglas (Chicago) at ...
Pages in category "Burials at Forest Hill Cemetery (Madison, Wisconsin)" The following 69 pages are in this category, out of 69 total.
English: The Confederate Rest section of Forest Hill Cemetery in Madison, Wisconsin in 2017. The cemetery is the northernmost Confederate cemetery in the United States.
Grave of I. Bernard Weinstein (1930–2008) at Forest Hill Cemetery, Madison, WI. Items portrayed in this file depicts. grave. creator. some value. author name string ...
Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery, Kansas City, Missouri; Forest Hill Cemetery (Greencastle, Indiana) Forest Hill Cemetery (Ann Arbor, Michigan) Forest Hill Cemetery (Utica, New York) Forest Hill Cemetery (Memphis, Tennessee) Forest Hill Cemetery (Madison, Wisconsin) Forest Hills Cemetery, Jamaica Plain, Boston, Massachusetts
Grave of Robert James Wilson (1929–2014) at Forest Hill Cemetery, Madison, WI. Items portrayed in this file depicts. grave. creator. some value. author name string ...
Lucius and Cassius both achieved the rank of Brigadier General, serving with the Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry. Charles served as a paymaster in the Union Navy. [citation needed] Jairus C. Fairchild died in Madison on July 18, 1862, and was buried at Forest Hill Cemetery. [2] [7]