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Magnolia Cemetery (Baton Rouge, Louisiana) facts for kids

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Magnolia Cemetery
Magnolia Cemetery BR.jpg
Entrance to Magnolia Cemetery
Magnolia Cemetery (Baton Rouge, Louisiana) is located in Baton Rouge
Magnolia Cemetery (Baton Rouge, Louisiana)
Location in Baton Rouge
Location 422 North 19th Street
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Area 20 acres (8.1 ha)
Built 1820s
NRHP reference No. 85000161
Added to NRHP January 31, 1985

Magnolia Cemetery is a 10-acre (4.0 ha) cemetery in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Description

The cemetery is located at 422 North 19th Street and is bordered on the north by Main Street and on the south by Florida Boulevard. The west and east sides are bordered by 19th Street and 22nd Street, respectively. The land for the cemetery was purchased by the town of Baton Rouge from John Christian Buhler Jr, in August 1852, with burials in the area dating back to the 1820s according to some sources. The cemetery was the site of intense fighting during the Battle of Baton Rouge on August 5, 1862; a commemorative ceremony is held at the cemetery each August. It was turned over to the city of Baton Rouge in 1947 and is now administered by the Recreation and Park Commission for the Parish of East Baton Rouge (BREC).

Magnolia Cemetery was added to National Register of Historic Places on January 31, 1985.

Notable burials

This cemetery was the main burial site for most prominent citizens of Baton Rouge, white and African-American, from 1820s to the 1970s and burials continue to the present. Among the more noteworthy persons buried here are 6th District Congressman Edward White Robertson (1823-1887) and his son Congressman Samuel Matthews Robertson (1852-1911), John Hill (1824-1910), 5th District Congressman William Brainerd Spencer (1835-1882), novelist Lyle Saxon (1891–1946), State Senator Douglas Cullum Montan (1834-1896), the Whig politician James M. Elam and his son James Essex Elam, four-time Mayor of Baton Rouge, former Register of State Lands Ellen Bryan Moore, and Cecil Morgan, the state representative who moved to impeach Huey Pierce Long Jr.

Magnolia Cemetery 2
Magnolia Cemetery has been a Baton Rouge Cemetery since 1852

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Cementerio Magnolia para niños

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