

Because of its importance as a tree collection, the cemetery was designated as a Level II Arboretum by the Tennessee Department of Urban Forestry in 1997. Through, I found one of these was Alice Cassin (March 22, 1865-Dec 4, 1869). The dramatic Entry Bridge, the Carpenter-Gothic Office Cottage the entire 80-acre cemetery are all on the National Register of Historic Places, and Elmwood is also an official Bird Sanctuary and Arboretum. CDI documents have been kept on microfilm since the 1950’s, but are now being scanned and linked to existing data. Elmwood is the most historic ground in this part of the world.

CDI documents include public laws, proclamations, and withdrawals. Two years later (1869), two of John and Alice’s children were reburied here in the family plot. The Control Document Index includes BLM documents that affect or have affected the control, limitation, or restriction of public land and resources. The grounds of Elmwood Cemetery were entered on the National Register of Historic Places on March 20, 2002. She would be laid to rest back here in Frederick next to her father’s sister, Olivia (1842-1867), who had died in 1867 at age 25.
FINDAGRAVE ELMWOOD CEMETERY MARY YONAN NEWEY ANCESTRY.COM FREE
Elmwood is the final resting place of those who created Memphis history and has emerged today as Memphis' finest and oldest active cemetery. Historical Person Search Search Results mary newey (1699 - Unknown) Try FREE for 14 days Try FREE for 14 days How do we create a person’s profile We collect and match historical records that Ancestry users have contributed to their family trees to create each person’s profile. These ideas are reflected in the many magnificent monuments, mausoleums and life-sized figures. During the Victorian Era, the popular view of death became romanticized death was now represented by symbols including angels, flowers, and plants. It is a classic example of a garden cemetery with its park-like setting, sweeping vistas, shady knolls, large stands of ancient trees, and magnificent monuments. Elmwood was established as part of the Rural Cemetery Movement which swept the nation in the early to mid 1800s. Since then, Elmwood Cemetery has become the final resting place to over 75,000 inhabitants including mayors, governors, madams, blues singers, suffragists, martyrs, generals, civil rights leaders, holy men and women, outlaws and millionaires. He was born Novemin Ogden, Utah to Joseph and Roberta Moyes Newey, the eldest of three children. In the 1870s the original corporation was dissolved and Elmwood became one of the oldest nonprofits in Tennessee. Newey, 86, passed away peacefully on Wednesday, September 29, 2010, with his beloved wife, Dawn and his family at his bedside. Originally consisting of 40 acres, it was expanded after the Civil War to 80 acres. Fifty Memphis gentlemen committed $500 each to purchase land and establish a new cemetery 2.5 miles from town in 1852.
