Elmwood Cemetery (Memphis, Tennessee)

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Elmwood Cemetery, Office, and Entrance Bridge
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Location: 824 Dudley St.
Coordinates: 35°7′19″N 90°1′45.52″W / 35.12194, -90.0293111Coordinates: 35°7′19″N 90°1′45.52″W / 35.12194, -90.0293111
Added to NRHP: May 22, 1978; March 20, 2002
NRHP Reference#: 78002632; 02000233

Elmwood Cemetery is the oldest active cemetery in Memphis, Tennessee. It was established in 1852 as one of the first rural garden cemeteries in the South.

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[edit] Origins

Elmwood was established as part of the Rural Cemetery Movement of the early to mid 1800's. A classic example of a garden cemetery, it is notable for its park-like setting, sweeping vistas, shady knolls, large stands of ancient trees, and magnificent monuments.

In 1852, a committee of fifty Memphis gentlemen each contributed $500 to purchase land for the Elmwood Cemetery. They envisioned that this would also be a park for the living as well, where family outings, picnics, and social gatherings could occur. It was meant to be a place where beautiful gardens were tended and individual monuments celebrated life and death.[1]

Originally consisting of 40 acres, it was expanded after the Civil War to 80 acres. In the 1870s the original corporation controlling the cemetery was dissolved and it became one of the oldest nonprofits in Tennessee.

Since then, more than seventy five thousand people have been buried at Elmwood Cemetery, with space still remaining for some twenty thousand more. Beneath the cemetery's ancient elms, oaks, and magnolias lie some of the city's most honored and revered dead. Flowering dogwoods and crepe myrtles are interspersed with Memphis history, those famous and infamous, loved and feared. The cemetery's gardens include the Carlisle S. Page Arboretum. There are veterans of every American war, from the Revolution forward. There are people from every walk of life and culture, including mayors of Memphis, governors of Tennessee, U.S. senators, generals, madams and murderers and, of course, perfectly ordinary citizens.

[edit] Civil War burials

More than 1,000 Confederate soldiers and veterans are buried in Confederate Soldiers Rest, located in the cemetery's Fowler Section. Many other Confederates are buried elsewhere in the cemetery. The first burial in Confederate Soldiers Rest was William (Thomas) Gallagher on June 17, 1861, and the last interment was John Frank Gunter on April 1, 1940. Among the Confederate generals buried there is James Patton Anderson, a former U.S. Congressman who commanded the Army of Tennessee in 1862, and William Henry Carroll, a brigadier-general in the Confederate States of America.

Union soldiers also were buried at Elmwood in the 1860s, but almost all were removed in 1868 and reinterred in Memphis National Cemetery. Two Union generals, William Jay Smith and Milton T. Williamson, remain at Elmwood. [2]

[edit] Yellow Fever burials

Memphis suffered periodic epidemics of yellow fever, a mosquito-borne viral infection, throughout the 19th Century. The worst of the epidemics occurred in the summer of 1878, when 5,150 Memphians died. Some 1,500 of the victims are buried in four public lots at Elmwood. Among them are doctors, ministers, nuns, and even prostitutes who died while tending to the sick.[1]

[edit] Visiting Elmwood

Elmwood Cemetery is located at 824 South Dudley Street, 0.4 miles south of Crump Boulevard. The cemetery grounds are open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. CST seven days a week.

[edit] References

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