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Forest Home Cemetery

Forest Home Cemetery and Chapel
Landmark Chapel.jpg
Landmark Chapel
Forest Home Cemetery is located in Wisconsin
Forest Home Cemetery
Forest Home Cemetery is located in the US
Forest Home Cemetery
Location 2405 Forest Home Ave., Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Coordinates 42°59′53″N 87°56′35″W / 42.99806°N 87.94306°W / 42.99806; -87.94306Coordinates: 42°59′53″N 87°56′35″W / 42.99806°N 87.94306°W / 42.99806; -87.94306
Area 198.5 acres (80.3 ha)
Built 1850
Architect Lapham, Increase A.; Multiple
Architectural style Gothic
NRHP Reference #

80000166

Added to NRHP November 03, 1980

80000166

Forest Home Cemetery located in the Lincoln Village neighborhood of Milwaukee, Wisconsin is the final resting place of many of the city's famed beer barons, politicians and social elite. Both the cemetery and its Landmark Chapel are listed on the National Register of Historic Places and were declared a Milwaukee Landmark in 1973.

The cemetery is run by a non-profit organization held in public trust. Profits from each sale are reinvested to insure continual care of the buildings and land. Its Victorian landscape contains over 300 species of trees, along with many ornate statues, crypts and monuments.

A committee appointed by members of St. Paul's Episcopal Church in 1847 established Forest Home Cemetery on what would later become Milwaukee's south side. When the land was selected it was located nearly two miles outside of the city limits along the newly built Janesville Plank Road (now Forest Home Avenue), in an area believed to be far enough from urban development to remain rural. The 72 acres (290,000 m2) that were purchased in 1850 quickly grew to nearly 200 acres (0.81 km2) by the start of the 20th century. Orville Cadwell was the first burial on August 5, 1850 but was soon joined by others due to an outbreak of cholera in the city.

This location was dotted by Paleo Indian burial mounds and intersected a large collection of effigy mounds known to settlers as the Indian Fields. It contained over sixty earthworks which were catalogued by pioneer scientist Increase A. Lapham, including a rare intaglio of a panther, none of which remains today. An Indian village populated the corner near what is now Lincoln Avenue that grew corn on the hills. They most likely chose this location due to its proximity to the Kinnickinnic River.


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