Results for Cemetery Hill
Hillcrest Cemetery
Located within the original 1850 town plat of Canton, this...
Cedar Hill Cemetery
First burials date back to founding of Corydon 1808. Col. ...
Oak Hill Cemetery G.A.R. Monument
In memory of
our heroic dead
G.A.R.
erec...
Hill Cemetery
This cemetery was originally part of the Depreciation Land...
Oak Hill Cemetery
1853
This acre was purchased from Mr. Clarke Brook...
Forest Hill Union Cemetery
On March 20, 1868, the Ohio General Assembly passed a revi...
Attack on Cemetery Hill
2nd Day
This hill was occupied by Union forces at no...
Willis Hill Cemetery
"There is a private cemetery on the crest, surrounded by a...
Green Hill Cemetery
The Tipton family cemetery, it stood near the homesite of ...
Cherry Hill Black Cemetery
A colonial & early American cemetery for Blacks, free and ...
Results for Cemetery Hill
Hillcrest Cemetery
Located within the original 1850 town plat of Canton, this cemetery has served citizens of this area for well over a century. The oldest documented burial is that of Ann Calhoon (1807-1860). Among those buried here in marked and unmarked ...
Cedar Hill Cemetery
First burials date back to founding of Corydon 1808. Col. Thomas L. Posey, a public minded citizen, donated the original ground to the Town of Corydon for burial purposes. The Farquar family added a small addition and the remainder of ...
Oak Hill Cemetery G.A.R. Monument
In memory of
our heroic dead
G.A.R.
erected - 1912
Marker is at the intersection of Delsea Drive (State Highway 47) and Montrose Terrace, on the right when traveling south on Delsea Drive.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Hill Cemetery
This cemetery was originally part of the Depreciation Lands (Leet's District), Tract #22, and was surveyed by Daniel Leet in 1785. Known as "McKean", it was patented to Governor Thomas McKean for his service in the American Revolution. After his ...
Oak Hill Cemetery
1853
This acre was purchased from Mr. Clarke Brookins by the Oak Hill Burying Ground Assoc. Burials began in 1839. Civil War vets Johann Bahler and Dr. Levi Halsted are buried here with other Wauwatosa pioneers.
Marker is at the ...
Forest Hill Union Cemetery
On March 20, 1868, the Ohio General Assembly passed a revision to the Ohio Revised Code allowing for a municipality and a township to join together in purchasing land for a shared cemetery. On April 24, 1868, the Washington Township ...
Attack on Cemetery Hill
2nd Day
This hill was occupied by Union forces at noon July 1 and provided a rallying point that afternoon for Union soldiers retreating to it from beyond the town.
On the evening of July 2, coordinated with the attack on Culp's ...
Willis Hill Cemetery
"There is a private cemetery on the crest, surrounded by a brick wall. Burnside's artillery had not spared it. I looked over the wall, which was badly smashed in places, and saw the overthrown monuments and broken tombstones lying on ...
Green Hill Cemetery
The Tipton family cemetery, it stood near the homesite of Samuel Tipton (1752-1833) and Susannah Reneau (1767-1853). Col. John Tipton, father of Samuel, deeded it to him in 1784. The house was later the home of a nephew, Issac P. ...
Cherry Hill Black Cemetery
A colonial & early American cemetery for Blacks, free and slave, lies up to the rear of the church.
Marker is on Readington Road, on the right when traveling west.
Courtesy hmdb.org