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Piedmont Region, North Carolina Cemeteries

  • Maplewood Cemetery

    Dating to 1869, soldiers and war veterans, tobacco magnates and community leaders rest here. Six Italian marble figures surround Carr family plot. Many gravesites marked with Victorian funeral art.

  • Geer Cemetery

    Founded in 1876 as the first cemetery for African-Americans in Durham. Margaret Faucette, founder of White Rock Baptist Church, and Edian Markham, founder of St. Joseph'

  • Historic National Cemetery and Confederate Prison Site

    Dedicated in 1874, this is the final resting place for veterans of all wars. Buried in 18 trench graves are 11,700

  • City Cemetery

    Thomasville's cemetery is one of only a handful in the United States that has both Confederate and Union soldiers buried together.

  • Confederate Cemetery

    The cemetery serves as the final resting place for 52 Confederate soldiers from the states of VA, NC, SC &

  • Willow Dale Cemetery

    In early 1853

  • Beechwood Cemetery

    Contains graves of many of Durham'

  • Settler's Cemetery

    The oldest city-owned graveyard and the only 18th century site remaining in the center city, which has recently had a $500,000 restoration. Charlotteans were buried here from 1776-1884.

  • Historic Oakwood Cemetery

    Adjacent to Historic Oakwood, Oakwood Cemetery is the resting place of 2,800 Confederate soldiers, five Civil War generals, seven governors and numerous US Senators. Established in 1869