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  2. Evergreen Cemetery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evergreen_Cemetery

    Evergreen Cemetery (Oakland, California), site for the memorial plaque honoring the victims of the Jonestown Massacre Evergreen Cemetery (Riverside, California) Evergreen Cemetery (Santa Cruz, California)

  3. Tom Jeffords - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Jeffords

    He was a partner in a mine in Santa Rita, NM and head of a company trying to supply water to the city of Tucson, AZ. [16] He lived out the last 22 years of his life in the Tortolita Mountains north of Tucson, at a homestead near the Owlhead Buttes. He died on February 19, 1914, and was buried in Tucson's Evergreen Cemetery. [7]

  4. Johnston Knox Corbett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnston_Knox_Corbett

    In 1885 he married Miss Lizzie Hughes, one of Tucson's native daughters, whose father Samuel C. Hughes, was one of Tucson's most prominent pioneers. [1] In December 1914 Corbett defeated incumbent Ira Huffman by close to 300 votes in an "extremely heavy vote" to become mayor of Tucson, Arizona. [2]

  5. 'It's hard not to cry': City dedicates Evergreen Cemetery ...

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  6. Evergreen Cemetery (Avon, Connecticut) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evergreen_Cemetery_(Avon...

    Evergreen Cemetery was established around 1860, but it does not appear to have been used extensively, except by the Chidsey family, until recent years. It was not included in the Hale census of Connecticut cemeteries conducted in the 1930s. The white-marble Chidsey obelisk is one of the chief objects of historical interest.

  7. Elizabeth Thorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Thorn

    Elizabeth Möser Thorn (December 28, 1832 – October 17, 1907) was an American cemetery caretaker who served as the caretaker of Evergreen Cemetery in Adams County, Pennsylvania, while her husband was serving in the Union Army. While pregnant, Thorn buried approximately one hundred soldiers who had died at the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863. [1] [2]