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Third Calvary Cemetery is north of the Brooklyn–Queens Expressway, and also bounded by Queens Boulevard, 49th Street and 58th Street. Fourth Calvary Cemetery is south of the Long Island Expressway, and also bounded by 55th Avenue, 50th Street and 58th Street. The cemetery's chapel is named for St. Callixtus and was designed by Raymond F ...
Calvary Cemetery, Woodside, Queens; Cedar Grove Cemetery (Queens, New York), Flushing, Queens; Cedar Hill Cemetery and Mausoleum, Newburgh; Cedar Lawn Cemetery, East Hampton; Cemetery of the Evergreens, Brooklyn; Cemetery of the Holy Rood, Westbury, New York; Chesed Shel Emes Cemetery, Liberty; Cold Springs Cemetery, near Carlisle Gardens
Friends Quaker Cemetery, Windsor Terrace; Green-Wood Cemetery [9] Holy Cross Cemetery, East Flatbush; Kings County Cemetery, also known as Kings County Farm Cemetery and Potter's Field (not be be confused with Potter's Field on Hart Island, Bronx), was located on Clarkson Avenue, East Flatbush; Maimonides Cemetery, Cypress Hills
The City of Brooklyn (which comprised a small area of what is now Brooklyn) had passed a similar law in 1849. [5] Lutheran Cemetery. Calvary Cemetery, in Queens, which recorded its first burial in 1848, was created on land that the trustees of St. Patrick's Cathedral had begun to buy up two years earlier.
Aerial view of part of the cemetery in 2020. Calvary Cemetery is a large cemetery located in the Queens borough of New York City.By 1949, the cemetery (owned by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York and administered by the trustees of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan) was one of the largest Roman Catholic cemeteries in the United States. [1]
Calvary Cemetery (Queens), Woodside, New York; Cypress Hills Cemetery, Brooklyn and Queens; Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale; Forest Hill Cemetery, Utica; Forest Lawn Cemetery, Buffalo; Gate of Heaven Cemetery, Hawthorne; Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn; Hartsdale Pet Cemetery and Crematory, Hartsdale – National Register of Historic Places since 2012
During its existence, the station served local industry as well as the Calvary Cemetery. Before the Kosciuszko Bridge was built, it also served businesses on the Brooklyn side of Newtown Creek (the name referring to the bridge that formerly connected Laurel Hill Boulevard to Meeker Avenue before it was closed in 1939) prior to the closure and ...
Burials at St. John's Cemetery (Queens) (44 P) Pages in category "Roman Catholic cemeteries in New York (state)" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total.