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The New Lisbon Cemetery is located in Jackson Township on the southwest corner of the intersection of County Roads 800 East and 550 North. There is an old and new (1893) section for this cemetery, located on both sides of County Road 800 East. Some of the stones are written in German.
New Lisbon was originally called Jamestown, and under the latter name was platted in 1833. [3] Jamestown was named in honor of one of its founders, James Tomlinson, Jr. (1800-1881), [4] but it was afterwards changed because there was another post office in the state with a similar name. [3]
This list of cemeteries in Indiana includes currently operating, historical (closed for new interments), and defunct (graves abandoned or removed) cemeteries, columbaria, and mausolea which are historical and/or notable.
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New Albany National Cemetery; O. Oak Hill Cemetery (Evansville, Indiana) Oak Hill Cemetery (Lebanon, Indiana) R. River View Cemetery (Aurora, Indiana) S.
New Lisbon was short lived and the name of the town changed to Camden around 1837 because there was another town of the same name in Indiana. [7] Grisell was a member of the Hicksite Quaker faith, mostly country Friends who perceived urban Friends as worldly, a group which split from Orthodox Friends in 1827 due to the views of Elias Hicks. As ...
Evergreen Cemetery: Morristown: New Jersey: 66 James Clark McReynolds [63] August 24, 1946: Glenwood Cemetery Elkton: Kentucky: 67 Louis Brandeis [64] October 5, 1941: Louis D. Brandeis School of Law: Louisville: Kentucky: 68 John Hessin Clarke [65] March 22, 1945: Lisbon Cemetery Lisbon: Ohio: 69 CJ William Howard Taft [56] March 8, 1930 [O ...
Kinne Cemetery: c. 1872–1987 [4] State Route 49 at 600 N Center Union Street Cemetery: c. 1839–1890 [4] Union Street Center Memorial Park Cemetery: c. 1937–present [4] State Route 2, south of Valparaiso Center pg 31 front Graceland Cemetery: c. 1890–present [4] U.S. 30 at Sturdy Road Center pg 30 Maplewood Cemetery: c. 1872–present [4]