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City of Miami Cemetery, Miami; Dade Memorial Park, Opa-Locka; Flagler Memorial Park Cemetery, Miami; Lakeside Memorial Park, Doral; Miami Memorial Park Cemetery, Miami; Mount Nebo Cemetery, Glenvar Heights; Mount Nebo Miami Memorial Gardens, West Miami; Neptune Memorial Reef, Key Biscayne; Our Lady of the Rosary and Prayer Gardens Miami
Find a Grave is a website that allows the public to search and add to an online database of human and pet cemetery records. It is owned by Ancestry.com.Its stated mission is "to help people from all over the world work together to find, record and present final disposition information as a virtual cemetery experience."
St. Augustine National Cemetery; St. Johns River Veterans Memorial Bridge; Sarasota National Cemetery; South Florida National Cemetery; Space Mirror Memorial; St. Augustine Foot Soldiers Monument; Statue of Christopher Columbus (Miami)
Hudson is a census-designated place (CDP) located at the westernmost end of Pasco County, Florida, United States, and is included in the Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area. As of the 2020 census, Hudson's population was 12,944.
The Withlacoochee site, though more environmentally sensitive, was supported by government officials. In February 1983, the state transferred land to the VA for the development of a Florida National Cemetery. The first burial was in 1988 and a columbarium was opened in November 2001. [2] In 1999, federal officials asked the Florida Cabinet to ...
The parish house, known as Grace Memorial House, was built in 1912. It is three-story brick building in the Tudor Revival style. The surrounding cemetery includes burials dating to 1734, when the church located at this site. Notable interments include Rufus King (1755–1827), Charles King (1789–1867) and William Duer (1743–1799). [2]
Cape Canaveral National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located near the Census designated place of Mims, Florida in Brevard County. It encompasses 318 acres (129 ha), and began interments on January 12, 2016. [1]
Some of Miami's most noted African-Americans [6] are buried in Lincoln Memorial Park: Kelsey Phar, first owner of the cemetery; (died 1964) H.E.S. Reeves, founder of the Miami Times, the county's oldest Black-owned newspaper; (died 1970) Gwen Cherry, the first African-American woman to serve as a state legislator in Florida; (died 1979)