Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mount Carmel Cemetery. Mount Carmel Cemetery is a Jewish cemetery located within the Cemetery Belt in Queens, New York City. that opened in 1906. The main section is in Glendale, Queens, and has more than 85,000 occupied plots. A new section was opened in nearby Ridgewood.
Mokom Sholom Cemetery: Queens: Ozone Park: 1864 No — [1] Old Montefiore Cemetery: Queens: Springfield Gardens: 1908 No Yes [8] Mount Carmel Cemetery: Queens: Glendale: 1906 No Yes [9] Mount Hebron Cemetery: Queens: Flushing: 1909 No Yes [10] [11] Mount Hope Cemetery: Brooklyn: Cypress Hills: 1881 No — Mount Judah Cemetery: Queens: Ridgewood ...
Moravian Cemetery, New Dorp; Mount Richmond Cemetery, Richmondtown (second cemetery of the Hebrew Free Burial Association; Ocean View Cemetery, Richmondtown; Saint Peter's Cemetery, West New Brighton. Oldest Catholic Cemetery on Staten Island, dating from 1848. Silver Lake Cemetery, Silver Lake (first cemetery of the Hebrew Free Burial Association)
Mount Richmond Cemetery, Staten Island (second cemetery of the Hebrew Free Burial Association) Mount St. Mary Cemetery, Flushing, Queens Mount Zion Cemetery , Maspeth, Queens
Moore-Jackson Cemetery; Mount Carmel Cemetery (Queens) ... Mount Olivet Cemetery (Queens) Mount Zion Cemetery (New York City) O. Old Town of Flushing Burial Ground; P.
Bayside Cemetery is a Jewish cemetery at 80-35 Pitkin Avenue in Ozone Park, Queens, New York City. It covers about 12 acres (4.9 ha) and has about 35,000 interments. [ 1 ] It is bordered on the east by Acacia Cemetery, on the north by Liberty Avenue , on the west by Mokom Sholom Cemetery, and on the south by Pitkin Avenue.
Mount Hebron is a Jewish cemetery located in Flushing, Queens, New York, United States. It was founded in 1903 as the Jewish section of Cedar Grove Cemetery, [1] and occupies the vast majority of the grounds at Cedar Grove. [2] The cemetery is on the former Spring Hill estate of colonial governor Cadwallader Colden. Mount Hebron is arranged in ...
Mount Richmond Cemetery was established in 1909, in response to the need for more graves for New York's indigent Jewish community. Currently, the Hebrew Free Burial Association buries approximately 400 Jews a year, and nearly 60,000 Jews have been buried since Mt. Richmond's inception.