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Holy Cross Cemetery, Colma; Holy Cross Cemetery, Menlo Park; Home of Peace Cemetery, Colma; The Italian Cemetery, Colma [22] Japanese Cemetery, Colma; Olivet Gardens of Cypress Lawn Memorial Park, Colma [23] Salem Memorial Park, Colma; Skylawn Memorial Park, San Mateo; Union Cemetery, Redwood City, on the National Register of Historic Places ...
Greenlawn Memorial Park, also known as the Odd Fellows Cemetery, is a private cemetery located at 1100 El Camino Real in Colma, California, United States. It was established in 1904. [ 1 ] In 1933, after ongoing city litigation the Odd Fellows Cemetery in San Francisco, part of the Lone Mountain Cemetery complex, reinterred some 26,000 graves ...
Congregation Beth Israel had consecrated a portion of City Cemetery in San Francisco as Sholom or Salem Cemetery on December 2, 1877. [1] [2]: 77 City Cemetery was mainly used to bury immigrants and the indigent, [3] with the vast majority of those interred being Chinese immigrants to California; the site is now occupied by the golf course in Lincoln Park and the Legion of Honor museum. [4]
Pages in category "Burials at Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery (Colma, California)" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Burials at Woodlawn Memorial Park Cemetery (Colma, California) (19 P) This page was last edited on 22 June 2023, at 04:49 (UTC). Text is ...
Emperor Norton (1819–1880), real name Joshua Abraham Norton, self-proclaimed Emperor of the United States; his grave was moved from the Masonic Cemetery, San Francisco in 1934. [6] [7] José Sarria (1922–2013), LGBT political activist, who styled himself as "The Widow Norton". [8] [9]
Olivet Gardens of Cypress Lawn Memorial Park was founded in 1896, originally as the Mount Olivet Cemetery, and is located at 1601 Hillside Boulevard in Colma, California. Its name was changed later to Olivet Memorial Park , and updated again following its acquisition by Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in 2020.
Three British Commonwealth service personnel of World War I were buried here, but only one, Lieutenant Norman Travers Simpkin (died 1919), Royal Field Artillery, has a marked grave in the cemetery. [17] Two others, Canadian Army soldiers, are alternatively commemorated on a special memorial in Greenlawn Memorial Park in Colma. [18