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This list of cemeteries in Rhode Island includes currently operating, historical (closed for new interments), and defunct (graves abandoned or removed) cemeteries, columbaria, and mausolea which are historical and/or notable.
French-Richards Cemetery (Springfield, New Jersey) (40.6827888144643, -74.31718794108211) Hillside Cemetery, Scotch Plains Hollywood Memorial Park and Cemetery, Union
On the grounds is the city's World War I memorial, dedicated in 1919 and designed by Warwick sculptor John G. Hardy, [2] who was also commissioned for memorials in North Providence as well as in Templeton, Massachusetts. [7] After falling into a period of decline, City Hall was restored beginning in the 1980s.
Buttonwood Beach is a bucolic neighborhood on the eastern limb of the Nausauket neck, located in the West Bay area of Warwick, Rhode Island. Buttonwoods is delimited by Nausauket and Apponaug to the west, Buttonwoods Cove to the north, Greenwich (aka Cowesett) Bay to the south and Oakland Beach to the east.
Construction or destruction of the All Souls' Hospital; unknown year. On December 18, 1891, the All-Soul's Hospital opened, operating out of the historic tavern. [1] Paul Revere, great-grandson of American revolutionary figure Paul Revere, was the founding chairman and president of the All Souls' Hospital Association. [1]
The neo-Gothic building was constructed in 1844. The building is the oldest Catholic church still in use in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence. [2] [3] The church building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.
Aldrich Mansion is a late 19th-century property owned by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence since 1939. It is located by the scenic Narragansett Bay at 836 Warwick Neck Avenue in Warwick, Rhode Island, south of Providence, Rhode Island.
Fairmount Cemetery is a 150-acre (0.61 km 2) rural cemetery in the West Ward of Newark, New Jersey, in the neighborhood of Fairmount. [2] It opened in 1855, shortly after the Newark City Council banned burials in the central city due to fears that bodies spread yellow fever.