Ad
related to: forest hill cemetery kansas city
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Joseph Boggs (1749–1843), army officer, moved from Old Westport Cemetery in 1915 [7] Daniel Boone III (1809–1880), and Mary Constance Philibert Boone (1814–1904), early Kansas City founders who settled in the area that later became Forest Hill Cemetery [8] Louis C. Boyle (1866–1925), Kansas Attorney General and lawyer [9]
Memorial to Confederate dead on the high ground at Forest Hill Cemetery, Kansas City. Joseph O. Shelby was buried by the memorial; Waldo P. Johnson is buried behind it. Although many signs and placards commemorating some aspect of the Battle of Westport are present throughout Kansas City today, the main battle monument is located in the Sunset ...
Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery, Kansas City, Missouri; Forest Hill Cemetery (Greencastle, Indiana) Forest Hill Cemetery (Ann Arbor, Michigan) Forest Hill Cemetery (Utica, New York) Forest Hill Cemetery (Memphis, Tennessee) Forest Hill Cemetery (Madison, Wisconsin) Forest Hills Cemetery, Jamaica Plain, Boston, Massachusetts
Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery, Kansas City; Lee's Summit Historical Cemetery, Lee's Summit; Union Cemetery, Kansas City; NRHP-listed [1] Jasper County.
Beach died at his home in Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri on January 21, 1939, from coronary thrombosis. He was buried at Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery in Kansas City. [1] [citation needed] Notable events during his tenure included: Construction of Kansas City Downtown Airport; Construction of a hospital on Hospital Hill
Johnson moved to Kansas City in 1880. [1] Johnson died on September 11, 1930, at his home at 3659 Harrison Street in Kansas City. [ 1 ] He was buried at Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery .
Hall died on October 29, 1982, at his home in Leawood, Kansas. [2] At the time of his death, the fortune of Hall and his son was estimated at around US$400,000,000 (equivalent to about $1,263,000,000 in 2023). [6] He was buried at Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery in Kansas City. [7]
He was buried in Forest Hill Calvary Cemetery in Kansas City. [43] [44] The Kansas City Convention Center, opened in 1976, [45] was named Bartle Hall in his honor, and Bartle's wife and friends provided items for exhibit cases there that memorialize his life. [46] Bartle's papers are in the State Historical Society of Missouri. [47]