Elmwood Cemetery: Difference between revisions

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* [[John P. Newsome]] (1893–1961), U. S. Representative 1943–1945
* [[John P. Newsome]] (1893–1961), U. S. Representative 1943–1945
* [[Luther Patrick]] (1894–1957), U. S. Representative 1937–1943
* [[Luther Patrick]] (1894–1957), U. S. Representative 1937–1943
* [[Jim Pyburn]] (1932–2011), baseball player and football coach
* [[Erskine Ramsay]] (1864–1953), mining engineer, inventor and philanthropist
* [[Erskine Ramsay]] (1864–1953), mining engineer, inventor and philanthropist
* [[Rufus Rhodes]] (1856–1910), founder of the ''[[Birmingham News]]''
* [[Rufus Rhodes]] (1856–1910), founder of the ''[[Birmingham News]]''

Revision as of 00:23, 24 May 2011

Elmwood Cemetery and Mausoleum is a 412 acre cemetery established in the 1880s (as Elm Leaf Cemetery) in the West End neighborhood of Birmingham by a group of Fraternal organizations. It was renamed in 1906 and gradually eclipsed Oak Hill Cemetery as the most prominent burial place in the city.

The cemetery is roughly bounded by Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive, Dennison Avenue Southwest, 14th Place Southwest, and railroad tracks. The main entrance is directly across from 6th Avenue Southwest.

The Lackey family constructed a funeral chapel for Johns-Ridouts Mortuary adjoining the cemetery at 800 Dennison Avenue Southwest in 1962.

The cemetery was integrated in 1970 after the family of Vietnam veteran Bill Terry, Jr won a federal lawsuit barring the owners from discriminating based on race. There are currently over 126,000 individuals interred at Elmwood.

Notable burials

External links

References

"Elmwood Cemetery (Birmingham, Alabama)." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 18 Apr 2009, 16:30 UTC. 25 May 2009 [1].

  • Stock, Erin (May 24, 2009) "Soldier whose death led to Elmwood Cemetery integration is honored." Birmingham News