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Cedar Lawn Cemetery (Jackson, Mississippi)

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Cedar Lawn Cemetery
Aerial view of Cedar Lawn Cemetery
Map
Details
Established1899[1]
Location
2434 West Capitol Street,
Jackson, Hinds County, Mississippi, U.S.
CountryUnited States
Coordinates32°19′06″N 90°13′00″W / 32.318380°N 90.216804°W / 32.318380; -90.216804
Size75.8 acres (30.7 ha)[2]
No. of graves>14,000 (July 2015)[2]
Find a GraveCedar Lawn Cemetery
The Political GraveyardCedar Lawn Cemetery

Cedar Lawn Cemetery, also known as Cedarlawn Cemetery, was created in 1899, becoming the second official public cemetery for the city of Jackson, Mississippi.[1]

Notable interments

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Flying Dutchmen

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Dutch memorial and grave sites in Cedar Lawn Cemetery

In the early years of World War II, Nazi Germany occupied the Netherlands.[6] Between 1942 and 1944, the United States permitted 500 displaced Dutch aviators to train at Jackson Army Airbase, which became known as the Royal Netherlands Military Flying School.[7] During those years, more than two dozen Dutchmen were killed in local training accidents. In recognition of their service, the City of Jackson donated a plot of ground within Cedar Lawn Cemetery to the Netherlands for burial of their dead.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b National Register of Historic Places Inventory – Nomination Form (Greenwood Cemetery) Retrieved 2015-07-14
  2. ^ a b City of Jackson, Cemetery Division, Cedarlawn Cemetery Retrieved 2015-07-14
  3. ^ "Bratton, Theodore DuBose". Episcopal Church. 2012-05-22. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  4. ^ Mississippi Governor Andrew Houston Longino Retrieved 2015-07-15
  5. ^ American National Biography Online – Dunbar Rowland. Retrieved 2015-07-16
  6. ^ War over Holland (1940) Retrieved 2015-07-16
  7. ^ Ward, Samuel Howard, Jackson's Flying Dutchmen: The Significance of the Royal Netherlands Military Flying School (2014). Master's Thesis. Paper 34 Retrieved 2015-07-16
  8. ^ Mississippi veterans honored on Mississippi Roads episode, Mississippi Public Broadcasting (May 8, 2014) Retrieved 2015-07-16
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