Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Loudon Park Cemetery

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Established
  
1853

Country
  
United States

Size
  
350-acre (142 ha)

Owner
  
Stewart Enterprises

Location
  
Baltimore, Maryland

Type
  
Public

Founded
  
1853

Phone
  
+1 410-644-1900

Loudon Park Cemetery

Owned by
  
Stewart Enterprises, Inc.

Address
  
3620 Wilkens Ave, Balti, MD 21229, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–5PMMonday9AM–5PMTuesday9AM–5PMWednesday9AM–5PMThursday9AM–5PMFriday9AM–5PMSaturday9AM–3PMSundayClosed

Burials
  
Harry Gilmor, Mary Young Pickersgill

Similar
  
Hubbard Funeral Home - Inc, Balti National Cemetery, Ambrose Funeral Home, Sterling‑A Funeral Home of, March Funeral Homes - E

Loudon park cemetery baltimore md


Loudon Park Cemetery and Loudon Park Funeral Home, Inc. in Baltimore, Maryland, are locally owned and operated. Both the Cemetery and the Funeral Home became privately owned in 2014 when they were acquired from SCI (Service Corporation International.) Loudon Park Funeral Home, Inc. was built on the grounds of the historic cemetery by Stewart Enterprises in 1995. SCI (Service Corporation International) acquired Stewart Enterprises in 2013. The expanded cemetery was incorporated on January 27, 1853 on 100 acres of the site of the "Loudon" estate, previously owned by James Carey, a local merchant and politician. The entrance to the cemetery is located at 3620 Wilkens Avenue.

Contents

Amtrak marc trains on the nec loudon park cemetery


Loudon National Cemetery

A portion of the eastern section is owned by the Federal Government as Loudon Park National Cemetery, acquired in 1861, and holds the remains of 2,300 Union soldiers killed during the Civil War. There is also a Confederate section where about 650 Confederate soldiers are buried, marked by a statue of a Confederate soldier. Since 2003, nearly all of the Confederates in this section have had new markers put on their graves under an "Adopt-a-Confederate" program. The entrance to the National Cemetery portion of Loudon Park is located along Frederick Avenue in the neighborhood of Irvington.

Notable persons

Notable persons interred here include:

  • Thomas Beck (December 29, 1909–September 23, 1995), actor
  • Charles Joseph Bonaparte (June 9, 1851–June 28, 1921), Former United States Attorney General, former United States Secretary of the Navy, founder of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
  • Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte (July 7, 1805–June 1, 1870), son of Jérôme Bonaparte, nephew of Emperor Napoleon I, father of Charles Joseph Bonaparte.
  • William Samuel Booze (January 9, 1862–December 6, 1933, U.S. Congressman from Maryland's 3rd District, 1897-1899
  • Abel G. Cadwallader (1841–July 6, 1907), Civil War Medal of Honor recipient.
  • Jack L. Chalker (December 17, 1944 – February 11, 2005), author
  • Barnes Compton (November 16, 1830–December 2, 1898), former Congressman and Maryland state Treasurer.
  • Frederick Nicholls Crouch (July 30, 1808–August 18, 1896), composer
  • Frederick George D'Utassy (1827–1892), Civil War Union Army officer
  • David Danforth (March 7, 1890–September 19, 1970), Major League Baseball player
  • James William Denny (November 20, 1838–April 23, 1923), Civil War Confederate Army officer and U.S. Congressman for Maryland's 3rd District, 1899-1901 and 1903-1905
  • Lewis Pessano "Buttercup" Dickerson (October 11, 1858–July 23, 1920), Major League Baseball player
  • Charles W. Field (April 6, 1828–April 9, 1892), military officer in the United States, Confederate and Egyptian armies
  • John T. Ford (April 16, 1829 – March 14, 1894), operator of Ford's Theater
  • James Albert Gary (October 22, 1833–October 31, 1920), former United States Postmaster General.
  • Harry Gilmor (January 24, 1838–March 4, 1883), Confederate cavalry officer and Baltimore City Police Commissioner.
  • Bradley T. Johnson (September 29, 1829 – October 5, 1903), Writer, Confederate Brigadier General, Commanded the 1st Maryland Regiment(C.S.A.).
  • William Kimmel, August 15, 1812–December 28, 1886, U.S. Congressman for Maryland's 3rd District, 1877-1881.
  • William W. McIntire, (June 30, 1850–March 30, 1912), U.S. Congressman for Maryland's 3rd District, 1897-1899.
  • H. L. Mencken (September 12, 1880–January 29, 1956), Controversial journalist, critic, author, and essayist.
  • Ottmar Mergenthaler (May 11, 1854–October 28, 1899), inventor of the Linotype.
  • Mary Young Pickersgill (1776–1857), Seamstress who made the flag flying over Fort McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore, inspiring Francis Scott Key to write The Star Spangled Banner.
  • Robert John Reynolds (March 17, 1838–June 10, 1909), former Governor of Delaware.
  • Samuel J. Seymour (March 28, 1860 - April 12, 1956), the last surviving witness to the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
  • The Weiskittel-Roehle Burial Vault, faced with cast iron, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.

    References

    Loudon Park Cemetery Wikipedia