Neha Patil (Editor)

Old City Cemetery (Lynchburg, Virginia)

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Area
  
26 acres (11 ha)

NRHP Reference #
  
73002216

Added to NRHP
  
April 2, 1973

Built
  
1806 (1806)

VLR #
  
118-0027

Phone
  
+1 434-847-1465

Old City Cemetery (Lynchburg, Virginia)

Location
  
4th, Monroe, 1st Sts. and Southern RR. tracks, Lynchburg, Virginia

Address
  
401 Taylor St, Lynchburg, VA 24501, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–3PMThursday10AM–3PMFriday10AM–3PMSaturday10AM–3PMSunday1–5PMMonday10AM–3PMTuesday10AM–3PMWednesday10AM–3PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Pest House Medical Museum, Point of Honor, Sandusky House, Amazement Square - The Right, Liberty Mountain Snowflex

Profiles

The Old City Cemetery is a historic cemetery in Lynchburg, Virginia.

It has been estimated that over 90% of Lynchburg’s enslaved and free African American population are buried in the Old City Cemetery, the primary burial site for African Americans from 1806 to 1865. In fact, at that time it was the only burial ground, excluding private family graveyards, available to African Americans in the area. 75% of the burials in the cemetery are African American. The cemetery's Confederate section contains the graves of over 2,200 soldiers from 14 states. Also interred at the cemetery is poet Bransford Vawter.

It was built on land donated to the City of Lynchburg by city founder John Lynch. As the land is soft and slopes downwards towards Blackwater Creek it is unsuitable for residential construction but excellent for a cemetery, so the land was dedicated to that purpose.

The 26-acre (110,000 m2) site includes four small historic house museums are located inside the cemetery, which is cared for by the Southern Memorial Association.

  • Pest House Medical Museum, Lynchburg's first hospital
  • Hearse House and Caretakers' Museum, museum about the cemetery and funerals
  • Station House Museum, a reconstructed C&O Railway Station furnished as in World War II
  • Mourning Museum, museum about mourning customs, located inside the Cemetery Center
  • Chapel and Columbarium, honors the many religious leaders buried there since 1806
  • The cemetery also includes a non-denominational chapel, built to commemorate the 200-year anniversary of the founding of Lynchburg's Old City Cemetery in 1806, and the lower columbarium with niches and crypts for new burials.

    References

    Old City Cemetery (Lynchburg, Virginia) Wikipedia