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  2. List of cemeteries in Cook County, Illinois - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cemeteries_in_Cook...

    2900 W. 111th St., Chicago: 1880 Nondenominational [14] Mount Hope (St. John's U.C.C.) Palatine: Mount Hope Cemetery 11500 S. Fairfield Ave., Chicago: 1865 Nonsectarian [15] Mount Hope Cemetery Elgin: Mount Isaiah Israel Cemetery (now Zion Gardens Cemetery) 6758 W. Addison St., Chicago: 1886 Jewish Mount Mayriv Cemetery (now Zion Gardens Cemetery)

  3. File:Wentbridge Robin Hood blue plaque (cropped).jpg

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wentbridge_Robin_Hood...

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  4. Forest Home Cemetery (Forest Park) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forest_Home_Cemetery...

    The Waldheim Cemetery was established as a non-religion-specific cemetery, where Freemasons, Romani, and German-speaking immigrants to Chicago could be buried without regard for religious affiliation. The two adjacent cemeteries merged on February 28, 1969, with the combined cemetery being called Forest Home (Waldheim means "forest home" in ...

  5. Theodore Roe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roe

    At around 10:00 p.m., as he sat on his stoop outside his home, he was shotgunned. He died outside his former home at 5239 S. Michigan Ave. Roe was laid out in a $3,500-$5,000 casket and received the biggest funeral of any Chicago African American since Jack Johnson in 1946. Thousands lined the streets to catch a glimpse of Roe's 81-car funeral ...

  6. Wentbridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wentbridge

    Wentbridge was unusual in that it had parts in three different civil parishes: the entire portion of the village to the north of the river, including the village church, was within the parish of Darrington, whilst south of the river, that part of the village on the west side of the B6474 road was within Thorpe Audlin parish, with buildings on the road's eastern side formerly in North Elmsall ...

  7. Robin Hood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood

    The first clear reference to "rhymes of Robin Hood" is from the alliterative poem Piers Plowman, thought to have been composed in the 1370s, followed shortly afterwards by a quotation of a later common proverb, [5] "many men speak of Robin Hood and never shot his bow", [6] in Friar Daw's Reply (c. 1402) [7] and a complaint in Dives and Pauper ...

  8. Robin Hood's Grave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Hood's_Grave

    Although the inscription is probably a forgery, there may have been a grave marker on this site as early as the 16th century. John Leland, in his Collectanea (compiled in the 1530s), mentions the tradition that Robin Hood is buried near Kirklees Priory, [8] but the earliest definite reference to the presence of a gravestone is found in Richard Grafton's Chronicle at Large (1569).

  9. Haymarket Martyrs' Monument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haymarket_Martyrs'_Monument

    The Haymarket Martyrs' Monument is a funeral monument and sculpture located at Forest Home Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago.Dedicated in 1893, it commemorates the defendants involved in labor unrest who were blamed, convicted, and executed for the still unsolved bombing during the Haymarket Affair (1886).