Knoxville National Cemetery

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Knoxville National Cemetery
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Location: 939 Tyson St., NW
Knoxville, Tennessee
Added to NRHP: September 12, 1996
NRHP Reference#: 96000966
MPS: Civil War Era National Cemeteries MPS
Governing body: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs


Knoxville National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in the city of Knoxville, in Knox County, Tennessee. It encompasses 9.8 acres, and as of the end of 2007, had 9,006 interments. It is administered by Chattanooga National Cemetery.

Contents

[edit] History

Knoxville National Cemetery was established by Major General Ambrose Burnside, and designed by E.B. Chamberlain at some point in late 1863, after the Battle of Fort Sanders. It was intended to inter Union dead, from that battle, and later to reinter dead from various battlefield cemeteries in the region.

Knoxville National Cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.

[edit] Notable monuments

  • The Union Soldier monument, usually referred to as the Tennessee or Wilder Monument, a large Gothic style memorial that was erected between 1890 and 1901.

[edit] Notable interments

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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