Английская Википедия:Greenwood Cemetery (Dallas)
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:More citations needed Шаблон:Infobox cemetery Greenwood Cemetery is privately owned non-denominational cemetery located at 3020 Oak Grove Avenue in the Uptown neighborhood of Dallas, Texas.[1] Founded in 1875 as the Trinity Cemetery, the first burial was a Mrs. Susan Bradford that March. It is one of the oldest cemeteries in the city of Dallas.[1] It is part of a cemetery tour, and sits next to the Emanu-El Cemetery, the Calvary Cemetery, and the Freedman's Cemetery Memorial.[2][3]
History
At the time of its founding, the cemetery was out of town and surrounded by farmland. By 1896, the cemetery had fallen into disrepair with one local noting: "The fence is down in twenty places, cattle roam all over the graves and wagons use the main street as a common thoroughfare."Шаблон:Citation needed This prompted the formation of the Greenwood Cemetery Association,[4] which took over the maintenance and operation of the cemetery and gave it its current name.
Notable burials
- Vivian Louise Aunspaugh (1869–1960), painter and art teacher
- Jacob Boll (1828–1880), naturalist and entomologist[1]
- John Henry Brown (1820–1895), newspaper publisher and member of the Texas legislature
- Nathaniel Macon Burford (1824–1898), politician, Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives
- Robert Emmet Burke (1847–1901), US Congressman
- Ben E. Cabell (1858–1931), mayor of Dallas
- William Lewis Cabell (1827–1911), mayor of Dallas
- John Riley Duncan (1850–1911), Texas Ranger and Bounty Hunter
- J. M. Howell (1849–1925), Dallas city alderman
- Levin Major Lewis (1832–1886), Confederate army general
- Benjamin Long (1838–1877), mayor of Dallas[3]
- William Stewart Simkins (1842–1929), Confederate soldier purported to have fired first shot of Civil War[1]
- Christopher Columbus Slaughter (1837–1919), American rancher, banker and philanthropist[1]
- J. M. Thurmond (1836–1882), attorney and mayor of Dallas
- John H. Traylor (1839–1925), politician, developer, mayor of Dallas
- Alexander White (1816–1893), US Congressman from Alabama
- Frank W. Wozencraft (1892–1966), mayor of Dallas
- Nelson Bunker Hunt (1926–2014), billionaire, horse-breeder and major financer of the John Birch Society
References