Fairmount Cemetery, Newark
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Fairmount Cemetery is a 150 acre (607,000 m²) Victorian cemetery in the West Ward of Newark, New Jersey in the neighborhood of Fairmount. It opened in 1855, shortly after the Newark City Council banned burials in the central city due to fears that bodies spread yellow fever. Fairmount is still accepting internments.
Along with Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Fairmount has the graves of Newark’s most eminent turn of the century citizens. Famous interees include brewer Gottfried Krueger, builder of the lavish Krueger Mansion on Martin Luther King Boulevard; fellow brewer Christian Feigenspan; Henry Lang of the Henry Lang Company and mayor 1882 - 1883; Clara Maass, who gave her life in the investigation of yellow fever; Gerhard Heinrich Mennen and William Heinrich Mennen of the Mennen Corporation. There are also many locally famous politicians and gangsters. A high proportion of the graves belong to German families. Fairmount Cemetery has beautiful trees, rolling hills, and intricately carved monuments. By the old South Orange Avenue entrance there is the recently restored zinc Settlers' Monument, commemorating the founders of Newark. There is also a Civil War memorial. The modern entrance to Fairmount Cemetery is on Central Avenue.
[edit] Notable burials
- Herman Lehlbach (1845-1904)
- Peter Angelo Cavicchia (1879-1967)
- Henry Meade Doremus
- Thomas Dunn English (1819-1902)
- James Fairman Fielder (1867-1954) - Governor of New Jersey 1913-1917
- William Henry Frederick Fiedler (1847-1919)
- Fred Allan Hartley, Jr. (1902-1969)
- Henry Lang (1828 - 1897) - Mayor of Newark, NJ 1882 - 1883
- Frederick Lehlbach (1876-1937)
- Le Gage Pratt (1852-1911)
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Newark History Tour of Fairmount
- Maps and aerial photos
- Street map from Google Maps or Yahoo! Maps
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA
- Satellite image from Google Maps or Microsoft Virtual Earth