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Mount Olivet Cemetery is a historic cemetery in Fort Worth, Texas. With its first burial in 1907, Mount Olivet is the first perpetual care cemetery in the South . Its 130-acre site is located northeast of downtown Fort Worth at the intersection of North Sylvania Avenue and 28th Street adjacent to the Oakhurst Historic District .
Greenwood Memorial Park at White Settlement Road and Boland Street in Fort Worth, Texas, has been a perpetual care commercial cemetery since its dedication in 1909. The Mount Olivet Corporation, a non-profit organization was founded by the Bailey family of Fort Worth. The organization is overseen by a local elected board of trustees.
Mount Hope Cemetery, Florence, South Carolina: Philip H. Stoll: March 4, 1913 December 14, 1872 Timmonsville, South Carolina: 66th (1919–1921) Joseph Bryan Thompson Democratic Oklahoma (5th district) September 18, 1919 48 Nephritis: Martinsburg, West Virginia: Mount Olivet Cemetery, Pauls Valley, Oklahoma: John W. Harreld: March 4, 1913 April ...
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.
Mt. Olivet Episcopal Church and Cemetery is an historic Carpenter Gothic style Episcopal Church building and its adjoining cemetery located at 335 Main Street in Pineville, Louisiana, United States. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 22, 2000. Mt. Olivet is no longer a parish church and is now Mount Olivet Chapel.
The district is a 172-acre (70 ha) site located on a series of tree shaded and landscaped hills overlooking central Charleston and includes the following cemeteries: Spring Hill Cemetery (established 1869), Mountain View Cemetery, B'nai Israel Cemetery, Lowenstein Cemetery, and Mount Olivet Cemetery. It is West Virginia's largest cemetery complex.
Mount Olivet Cemetery: 1918: African-American: Extant: Above ground tombs and copings Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery: 1939: Historic rural: Extant: Above ground tombs with newer above ground tombs Hurricane Katrina Memorial: 2008: Mausoleum: Extant: Houses remains of unknown victims of Hurricane Katrina
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