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Results for Burying Ground

Public Burying Ground

During the yellow fever epidemic of 1821, this half-acre plot was set aside as a public cemetery. Many Protestant pioneers to the new Florida Territory are buried here. Often such burials, made at public expense, went unmarked.

The Presbyterian Church ...

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Franklin Street Burying Grounds

Reconsecration

of the

Franklin Street

Burying Grounds

The first Jewish

Cemetery in Virginia

Founded 1791

Commemorating

the 300th anniversary

of the first permanent

Jewish settlement

in the United States

This memorial erected by

Congregation Beth Ahabah

Richmond, Virginia

Unveiling April 24, 1955

Rededication services

under auspices

Richmond Tercentenary Committee

of the

Richmond Jewish Community Council

Marker is at the intersection of ...

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Hopper Family Burying Ground

Located on the

boundary between

two Hopper farms, the

cemetery was shared

by both families and

their relatives for

almost one hundred

years. The earliest

known burial was

in 1804.

Marker is on Spotswood Road 0.1 miles west of Delmar Avenue, on the left when traveling west.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Old Burying Ground

In use for nearly two hundred years, largely by the Blauvelt family, the earliest known burial was in 1722. The cemetery contains the graves of members of other early Bergen County families, veterans of the American Revolution and slaves. Some ...

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Old Congregational Burying Ground

[Left Plaque]

In honor of

the men and women

who planted in the wilderness

the early homes of Stratford,

who fought bravely and suffered patiently

in the War of the American Revolution,

and who left to their descendents

a proud memory of courage,

endurance and ...

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French Burying Ground

French Burying Ground

First used 1677

Placed by

David Demarest Chapter

Daughters of the American Revolution

1955

Marker is on Patrolman Ray Woods Lane, on the right when traveling west.

Courtesy hmdb.org

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Stratton Burying Ground

Purchased for $120 by Evesham

in 1813 from Enoch and Hannah

Stratton for a public burying

ground. Became part of Medford

upon the founding of the

township in 1847.

1847-1997

Marker is on Stokes Road (County Route 541) north of Himmelein Road, on the left when traveling ...

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Potters Corners Burying Ground

Potters Corners Burying Ground

Early stone marked 1785

Site of Trinity Methodist Church

Until 1860’s

Union Vale Historical Society

Marker is at the intersection of Bruzgul Road (County Route 21) and Clapp Hill Road, on the left when traveling east on Bruzgul ...

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Burying Ground

Burying Ground

Vanderburgh Family

Col. James Vanderburgh

5th Regiment D. C. Militia

In Revolutionary War

Born 1729. Died 1794.

Marker is on New York Route 55 0.1 miles north of Connecting Road, on the right when traveling north.

Courtesy ...

Westminster Burying Ground

Westminster's origins stretch back to 1786 when local Scots-Irish Presbyterians acquired land here for a new burial ground, a mile or so from the center of the growing town of some 12,000. First Presbyterian Church included many of Baltimore's most ...

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