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St Adalbert Cemetery is a Roman Catholic cemetery located in Niles, Illinois. It is bordered by Milwaukee Avenue on the east, Albion and Hayes Streets on the south, and Harlem Avenue on the west. Various non-cemetery properties separate it from Touhy Avenue on the north. It is intersected at its center from north to south by Newark Avenue.
St. Adalbert Cemetery: 6800 Milwaukee Ave., Niles: 1872 primarily Polish Catholic [18] Saint Alphonsus Lemont: 1870 Catholic Saint Anne Catholic Cemetery Park Forest: 1865 Catholic Saint Benedict Cemetery 4600 W. 135th St., Crestwood: 1885 Catholic Saint Boniface Cemetery 4901 N. Clark St., Chicago: 1863 Primarily German Catholic [19]
St. Adalbert's Cemetery, Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Jerry Kleczka: January 3, 1949 November 18, 1912 Milwaukee, Wisconsin: 98th (1983–1985) Edwin B. Forsythe Republican New Jersey (13th district) March 29, 1984 68 Lung cancer [165] Moorestown Township, New Jersey: Medford Friends Meeting Cemetery, Medford, New Jersey: Jim Saxton: November 3, 1970 ...
St. Adalbert Cemetery, the largest in the Archdiocese of Chicago in terms of burials, [37] is the resting place of German immigrant Fredrak Fraske (1872–1973), who was the last surviving veteran of the "Indian Wars". [38] St.
St. Adalbert parish was founded in 1874 by the Polish Catholic community in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood. By the time of the church's centennial celebration, the congregation had predominantly Mexican heritage, reflective of greater changes in the surrounding neighborhood.
The pews at St. Adalbert Parish started filling up before 10 on Monday night. By 11 p.m., the Catholic church on Milwaukee's south side was so packed that people lined the walls and stood shoulder ...
St. Adalbert Cemetery, Niles; Westlawn Cemetery, Chicago; Showmen's Rest (circus performers) Indiana Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis; Greenlawn Cemetery ...
The Polish Church of St. Adalbert is a former Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at East 156 Street west of Elton Avenue since 1899 in Melrose, Bronx, New York City.