Oakwood Cemetery (Richmond, Virginia)

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Oakwood Cemetery
Oakwood Cemetery-Confederate Section-Richmond VA.jpg
View of a small portion of the Confederate Section
Oakwood Cemetery (Richmond, Virginia) is located in Virginia
Oakwood Cemetery (Richmond, Virginia)
Location within Virginia
Details
Established1854
Location
CountryUnited States
Coordinates37°32′15″N 77°23′55″W / 37.5376388°N 77.3985904°W / 37.5376388; -77.3985904Coordinates: 37°32′15″N 77°23′55″W / 37.5376388°N 77.3985904°W / 37.5376388; -77.3985904
Owned byCity of Richmond
Size176 acres
No. of interments>48,000
Websiterestoreoakwood.com
Find a GraveOakwood Cemetery

Oakwood Cemetery is a large, city-owned burial ground in the East End of Richmond, Virginia. It holds over 48,000 graves, including many soldiers from the Civil War.

History[]

The City of Richmond purchased land in 1799 for the main purpose of establishing a municipal burying ground. The Shockoe Hill Cemetery was established on those grounds in 1820. When space became scarce for new burials, the city responded by expanding the burying ground with the addition of 14 acres in 1850. Five of those acres were added to the walled Shockoe Hill Cemetery for white interments, and the remainder was added to the portion of the burying ground there located outside of the walls, reserved for the interment of people of colour and the enslaved (that portion of the burying ground was established in 1816). The city further responded by buying two tracts of land in what was then Henrico County in 1854, totaling 66 acres (27 ha). In early March of 1855 the Committee on the Oakwood Cemetery and its Superintendent were ready to receive applications for interment of white persons who did not wish to buy a section and for persons of color.[1] In May of 1855 it was reported that portion of ground intended for colored burials was ready, and a number of interments had already been made in it.[2] The Oakwood Cemetery Committee was a standing committee of the Richmond City Council.[3]

In 1861, Richmond was named the capital of the new Confederate States of America. After the Civil War broke out, the city's hospitals and clinics received a large number of critically wounded soldiers. The City Council agreed to provide interment for soldiers who died in Richmond or Henrico County, and in July 1862 offered to have Oakwood Cemetery opened for large scale burial of Confederate soldiers, and set aside a separate section of the grounds for this purpose.

Soldiers Monument 1911.

Oakwood Cemetery was set as the final resting place of soldiers who died in treatment at Chimborazo Hospital, a massive facility on Church Hill. By the end of the war, the Confederate section of the cemetery covered about 7.5 acres (3.0 ha) and contained around 17,000 burials.

The United States Congress passed a resolution in 1866, a year after the war's end, providing for the creation of a system of national cemeteries for the interment of veterans and war dead. The resolution also called, controversially, for the removal of Union war dead and re-interment in the new national cemeteries.[4] The Richmond National Cemetery received the remains of 5,896 Union Soldiers from 09/01/1866 – 09/30/1867. Of that number, 1,432 were re-interments of soldiers originally interred in Oakwood Cemetery.[5]

Oakwood Cemetery today covers about 176 acres (71 ha) of ground, and continues to be maintained by the City of Richmond and various charitable trusts.

Notable burials[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Daily Dispatch, March 7, 1855, Notice – Oakwood Cemetery
  2. ^ The Daily Dispatch, April 24, 1855, Notice – Oakwood Cemetery
  3. ^ The Richmond Directory, and Business Advertiser, for 1856, Containing the Names, Residences, Occupations and Places of Business of the Inhabitants of Richmond; Also a Variety of Other Useful Information
  4. ^ Oakwood Memorial Association (1954). Eighty-eighth anniversary of the Oakwood Memorial Association in the century old Oakwood Cemetery. Richmond: Oakwood Memorial Association.
  5. ^ Statement of the disposition of some of the bodies of deceased Union soldiers and prisoners of war whose remains have been removed to national cemeteries in the Southern and Western States. Volume IV, Washington Government Printing Office, 1868.

External links[]

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