I love cemeteries. When Gina asked if I was interested in visiting Historic Oakland Cemetery, my answer was an emphatic, "Yes!"
Eric, me, Gina, & Jim
In 1850 Atlanta purchased six acres of land to be used as a cemetery and named it Atlanta Graveyard. It was renamed Oakland Cemetery in 1872 and expanded to forty-eight acres. Locals enjoyed carriage rides and picnics here among the carefully tended family plots.
I took many pictures and am sharing just a few today.
The Bell Tower Building
Anne Cox Chambers' grave is
tastefully maintained.
The Swift Burkhardt Mausoleum
is open for the Illumine 2024
A table & chairs is set up
in the center of the
Mausoleum.
Tealights add to the
dignified setting.
The Cemetery is hilly.
Margaret Mitchell, author of
Gone with the Wind is buried
here with her husband, John
Robert March & her parents,
This is the Goodknow Family Plot
The Grant Mausoleum
has a pyramid roof.
This Angel was chosen to
remember a little boy.
Some graves have
full length covers.
This grave has an Urn draped
with a Shroud.
The Austell, Kennedy, Thornton
Mausoleum is grand.
monument
Jim & Eric sit & chat for a bit.
Ira Goldberg
July 27, 1947 - December 8, 2019
His Love and Kindness
Still Live
Our Beloved Husband,
Father, Son, Brother
We see Hebrew carved into
the Monuments.
This is the Jewish Section
of the Cemetery. Confederate Soldiers are
buried here.
An open field...
There are many unmarked
graves in Potters Field.
Oakland Cemetery is a quiet place to walk, explore, and learn about Atlanta's history.
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