Results for Potter's Field
Potter's Field Cemetery
The land was originally part of 80 acres owned by Jacob W....
Potter's Field
From 1843 to 1871, this area was the City Cemetery potter'...
The Barton Street Potter's Field
This marker commemorates the indigent and unknown once int...
Potter's Field
Hidden Truths
From 1843 to 1871, this area was the C...
Results for Potter's Field
Potter's Field Cemetery
The land was originally part of 80 acres owned by Jacob W. Conroe who built a sawmill at Manitowoc Rapids in 1856. In 1914 the farmland was purchased by Manitowoc County and the ground set aside as a free burial ...
Potter's Field
From 1843 to 1871, this area was the City Cemetery potter's field, a graveyard for the poor and disenfranchised.
More that 15,000 people, including 4,000 Civil War Rebels, were buried here on marshy land near the water's edge. Within six ...
The Barton Street Potter's Field
This marker commemorates the indigent and unknown once interred on this site. Provided by the City in 1816 and once called the Colored Cemetery, it was the final resting place for former slaves and free blacks. Long barren and unused, ...
Potter's Field
Hidden Truths
From 1843 to 1871, this area was the City Cemetery potter's field, a graveyard for the poor and disenfranchised. More that 15,000 people, including 4,000 Civil War Rebels, were buried here on marshy land near the water's edge. Within ...