fbpx
Wikipedia

Pioneer and Military Memorial Park

The Pioneer and Military Memorial Park is the official name given to seven historic cemeteries in Phoenix, Arizona. The cemeteries were founded in 1884 in what was known as "Block 32". On February 1, 2007, "Block 32" was renamed Pioneer and Military Memorial Park. The Pioneer and Military Memorial Park is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The historic Smurthwaite House, which is also listed in the National Register of Historic Places, is located on the grounds of the Pioneer and Military Memorial Park and is used as the cemetery's main office. Pioneer and Military Memorial Park is the final resting place of various notable pioneers of Arizona.

Pioneer and Military Memorial Park
Main entrance of the Pioneer and Military Memorial Park
Location1317 W. Jefferson Street Phoenix, Arizona
Coordinates33°26′47″N 112°5′25″W / 33.44639°N 112.09028°W / 33.44639; -112.09028
Built1884
WebsitePioneers' Cemetery Association
NRHP reference No.06001317[1]
Added to NRHPFebruary 1, 2007

History edit

Prior to the establishment of the Pioneer and Military Memorial Park, there were other cemeteries already in existence as early as 1850. The citizens of the newly founded city became concerned with the "old" cemetery, which was once located between 5th and 7th Avenues and Jackson and Madison Streets, near a newly built train station. They feared that the sight of the "old" cemetery would be an unpleasant one to the railroad passengers who would visit the city in the newly established railroad system.[2][3]

In 1884, the city counsel decided to purchase Block 32 in what archaeologists have now determined were the ruins of a pre-Columbian Hohokam community which they named "La Villa".[4] The families who had their loved ones buried in the old cemetery, had them moved to the new one. The city also reburied the unclaimed bodies in a common grave in the new cemetery.[2][3] On October 8, 1884, John R. Loosley became the owner of some of the western portion of "Block 32". He moved bodies from the potters field of the old cemetery and buried them in what became known as the "City" or "Loosley" cemetery. In 1888, Lulu G. Porter, wife of DeForest Porter, acquired the south half of Block 32 and had it laid out as a cemetery, which is now known as Porter cemetery.[5]

The "Block 32" cemetery is made up of seven historic cemeteries which were in use between 1884 and 1914. Each of the seven cemeteries has its own name: the "Ancient Order of United Workmen" (AOUW), "Independent Order of Odd Fellows (IOOF)", "Knights of Pythias" (K of P), "Loosley" (also known as City Cemetery), "Masons", "Porter" and "Rosedale". In 1914, a law forbidding further burials within city limits went into effect and the seven cemeteries were declared closed. The cemeteries fell into a state of abandonment.[2] After years of disrepair, the citizens of Phoenix rallied to restore the cemeteries. After the cemeteries were restored, they were officially designated, in May 1988, as the "Pioneer and Military Memorial Park". It is estimated that there are 3,700 burials; however, fewer than 600 of these graves have headstones.[2][3]

The area which comprises the Pioneer and Military Memorial Park is bounded by 13th and 15th Avenues and Jackson and Harrison Streets. The main entrance is located at 1317 W. Jefferson Street.[2][6]

In 1930, the Pioneers' Cemetery Association was founded. The association began the preservation and restoration of the cemeteries in the Pioneers and Military Memorial Park. They were also in charge of researching the history behind the burials. However, their work was interrupted by the death of Thomas Hayden, the prime researcher, and by World War II. The present Pioneers' Cemetery Association was formed in 1983 and has continued the work which was previously interrupted by the events previously mentioned. The association has a working relationship with the City of Phoenix.[5]

The Smurthwaite House edit

Smurthwaite House
 
The Smurthwaite House
LocationOriginally located at 602 N. 7th Street
moved to 1317 W. Jefferson Street Phoenix, Arizona
Built1897
ArchitectCreighton & Millard
Architectural styleVictorian
NRHP reference No.01000479[1]
Added to NRHPMay 17, 2001

The Smurthwaite House was designed and built in 1897 by Creighton & Millard, a local firm, for Dr. Darius M. Purman and his wife, Mary. The house, which was originally located at 602 N. 7th Street, was intended to be used as a boarding house.[7] In 1903, the Purman's sold the house to National Bank of Arizona of Phoenix. That same year Captain Trustrim Connell, recipient of the Medal of Honor, and his wife Ann purchased the house.[7] In 1938, it was deeded to their daughter Caroline who married Charles Smurthwaite. Later, the house was passed on to the Smurthwaite's daughter, Carolann Smurthwaite, who lived there until her death in 1982. Carolann had willed the house to be jointly administered by the Phoenix Art Museum, The Museum of Northern Arizona and the Heard Museum.[7]

In 1991, the Heritage Fund approved a grant of $50,000 to restore the Smurthwaite House and in 1994, the house was moved to its current location at 1317 W. Jefferson Street. It currently serves as the office of the historic "Pioneer and Military Cemetery".[8]

The "Bird's eye view of Phoenix, Maricopa Co., Arizona" map, created in 1885 by Czar James Dyer, is on display in the main room of the Smurthwaite House. In 1899, Dyer served as Phoenix's acting mayor.[9]

National Register of Historic Places edit

The Smurthwaite House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on May 17, 2001, NRHP reference number 01000479. Historic Significance: Architecture/Engineering; Area of Significance: Architecture.[10] The Pioneer Military and Memorial Park was designated as historical and listed in the National Register of Historic Places on February 1, 2007, NRHP reference number 06001317. According to the National Register, the "Periods of Significance" are from 1850 to 1924.[11]

Notable interments edit

Every year "Historic Cemetery Walking" tours, sponsored by the Pioneers’ Cemetery Association, are held.[12] Among the notable burials included in the tours are the following:[13][14]

 
Judge John Taylor Alsap
 
Phillip "Lord" Darrell Duppa
 
Henry Garfias
 
Benjamin Joseph Franklin
 
King S. Woolsey
Masons Cemetery
  • Judge John Taylor Alsap – Alsap was the first Treasurer of the Arizona Territory. He also served as both Speaker of the House and President of the Council in the Arizona Territorial legislature. In 1881, he became the first Mayor of Phoenix. Alsap died September 10, 1886.[15]
  • Phillip "Lord" Darrell Duppa – Duppa was an Englishman who is credited with naming "Phoenix" and "Tempe". He is also the founder of the town of New River, Arizona. Duppa died on January 29, 1892.[16]
City/Loosley Cemetery
 
City/Loosley Cemetery entrance
  • Henry Garfias – Garfias was a Hispanic who became the first marshal of Phoenix, Arizona. He was also a gunfighter who became the highest elected Mexican American official in the Valley during the 19th century.
  • Jacob "Dutchman" Waltz – Waltz was a German immigrant who in the 19th century discovered a gold mine in Arizona and kept its location a secret, hence the name "Lost Dutchman's Mine". The Lost Dutchman Mine is supposedly located in the Superstition Mountains east of Phoenix. Waltz died an itinerant poor farmer on October 25, 1891, at age 81. According to the accounts of the day "A flood came through, he hung onto a tree, he caught pneumonia".[17]
  • King S. Woosley – Woosley founded one of the first flour mills in the Salt River Valley. He served in various positions in the territorial legislature and opened the first ice skating rink in Phoenix. Woosley died on June 30, 1879.[18]
Rosedale Cemetery
 
Rosedale Cemetery entrance
  • Benjamin Joseph Franklin – Franklin was a Missouri U.S. Congressman and later served as U.S. Consul to China. He moved to Arizona in 1896. President Grover Cleveland appointed Franklin Arizona's 12th Territorial Governor. Franklin died on May 18, 1898.[19]
  • Czar James Dyer – Dyer once served as councilman and in 1899 as the acting mayor of Phoenix. Dyer drew the "Bird's Eye view of Phoenix" map which is currently on display in the Smurthwaite House. Dyer died on March 28, 1903.[20]
  • Noah M. Broadway – Broadway, who died on November 3, 1905, was one of the original settlers of Phoenix. He was an American Civil War veteran, farmer, and sheriff of Maricopa County. His farm was located between 7th and 23rd Avenues on the south side of what is now "Broadway Road".[21]
  • J.W. Bolton – Bolton was a barber who became the first African-American Mail carrier in Phoenix. Bolton died on December 26, 1902.[22][23]
  • Robert Plumridge – Plumridge served in the California Column of the Union Army and fought against the Confederate Forces in the Battle of Picacho Pass during the American Civil War.[24]
Porter Cemetery
 
Porter Cemetery entrance
  • Clarence Proctor – Colton was a Buffalo Soldier who was a sergeant in Troop L of the 10th U.S. Cavalry during the Spanish–American War. On March 27, 1900, Proctor committed suicide.[25][26]
  • Millard Lee Raymond – Raymond served as a Rough Rider of Troop F 1st U.S. Volunteers Cavalry in Santa Fe, New Mexico. His unit fought in the Spanish–American War in Cuba under the command of Theodore Roosevelt. Raymond died on January 11, 1899[27][28]
Knights of Pythias & Ancient Order of United Workmen Cemetery
 
Knights of Pythias & Ancient Order of United Workmen Cemetery entrance
  • Frederick E. Tovrea – Tovrea was the 10-year-old son of E. A. Tovrea owner of the "Tovrea Land and Cattle Co." packing house and the "Tovrea Castle" in Phoenix. The child died on July 17, 1898, of appendicitis.[29]
  • John Preston Osborn – Osborn arrived in Prescott, Arizona in 1854. While he lived there, he built that town's first hotel. The hotel is also considered to be Arizona's first. Eventually he moved to the Salt River Valley and assisted in the establishment of Phoenix. Osborn died on January 19, 1900. Osborn Road in Phoenix is named after him.[30]
  • The Rossen Children – The children of Dr. Roland Rosson, whose house the historic Rosson House in Phoenix is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Roland Lloyd Rosson died on February 25, 1883, and an "Infant Daughter" on January 7, 1896.[22]
  • William Augustus Hancock – Hancock laid out the first town site of Phoenix in 1870. Known as the "Father of Phoenix", he was appointed district attorney in 1871, probate judge in 1875 and was the first sheriff in Maricopa County. Hancock died on March 24, 1902.[22]
  • Tom Graham – Graham was the last man killed in the Pleasant Valley War. Ed Tewsbury ambushed Graham near the Buttes when he was traveling to Tempe with a load of grain.
Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery
 
Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery entrance
  • Lindley Orme – Orme, a former member of the Confederate Army of America, once served in the Territorial Council and later as Maricopa County sheriff. Orme died on September 24, 1900.[22]
  • Frank B. Moss – Moss was the Mayor, Fire Chief and Wagon Maker of Phoenix. He served two terms in office, the first in 1896 and the second 1905–06. He died at the age of 53 from a heart attack while serving as mayor, as he ascended the City Hall stairs.

Graves edit

See also edit

Other historic Phoenix structures in Phoenix

References edit

  1. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e Pioneers' Cemetery Association, Inc. 2014-04-21 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c Phoenix Government 2014-03-16 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ La Villa Fast Facts
  5. ^ a b Cemetery history
  6. ^ National Register of Historic Places
  7. ^ a b c Connell Smurthwaite House
  8. ^ National Register of Historic Places 2
  9. ^ Library of Congress
  10. ^ National Register of Historic Places Smurthwaite House
  11. ^ National Register of Historic Places The Pioneer Military and Memorial Park
  12. ^ Historic Pioneer & Military Memorial Park Listed in the National Register of Historic Places – PMMP Guide
  13. ^ Historic Cemetery Walk
  14. ^ List of burials in the Pioneer & Military Memorial Park 2014-04-21 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Goff, John S. (1983). Arizona Biographical Dictionary. Cave Creek, Arizona: Black Mountain Press. p. 3. OCLC 10740532.
  16. ^ "Lord" Darrell Duppa
  17. ^ Blair, Robert (1975). Tales of the Superstitions: The Origins of the Lost Dutchman's Legend. Tempe, Arizona: Arizona Historical Foundation. p. 12.
  18. ^ Yuma Sun, September 28, 2007 Archived October 21, 2007, at archive.today
  19. ^ Biodata
  20. ^ Arizona gravestones
  21. ^ Fraternal Order of Police Maricopa Lodge 5
  22. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on 2014-03-22. Retrieved 2014-03-21.
  23. ^ Documents
  24. ^ Robert Plumridge Arizona Burial
  25. ^ Arizona Graves 2
  26. ^ Mounton, Heather L.; Tatterson, Susan (2020). Graveyards of the Wild West – Arizona. America Through Time (Fonthill Media). p. 26. ISBN 978-1634992275.
  27. ^ Millard Lee Raymond burial
  28. ^ Pvt. Millard L. Raymond, d. 1899
  29. ^ Tovrea Castle
  30. ^ From Puritans to Common Folk

External links edit

  • – Pioneers' Cemetery Association, Inc.
  • U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Pioneer and Military Memorial Park
  • Pioneer and Military Memorial Park at Find a Grave
  • Ancient Order of United Workmen Cemetery at Find a Grave
  • Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery at Find a Grave
  • Knights of Pythias Cemetery at Find a Grave
  • U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: City Loosley Cemetery
  • Loosley Cemetery at Find a Grave
  • Masons Cemetery at Find a Grave
  • U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Porter Cemetery
  • Porter Cemetery at Find a Grave
  • U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Rosedale Cemetery
  • Rosedale Cemetery at Find a Grave

pioneer, military, memorial, park, official, name, given, seven, historic, cemeteries, phoenix, arizona, cemeteries, were, founded, 1884, what, known, block, february, 2007, block, renamed, listed, national, register, historic, places, historic, smurthwaite, h. The Pioneer and Military Memorial Park is the official name given to seven historic cemeteries in Phoenix Arizona The cemeteries were founded in 1884 in what was known as Block 32 On February 1 2007 Block 32 was renamed Pioneer and Military Memorial Park The Pioneer and Military Memorial Park is listed in the National Register of Historic Places The historic Smurthwaite House which is also listed in the National Register of Historic Places is located on the grounds of the Pioneer and Military Memorial Park and is used as the cemetery s main office Pioneer and Military Memorial Park is the final resting place of various notable pioneers of Arizona Pioneer and Military Memorial ParkU S National Register of Historic PlacesMain entrance of the Pioneer and Military Memorial ParkShow map of ArizonaShow map of the United StatesLocation1317 W Jefferson Street Phoenix ArizonaCoordinates33 26 47 N 112 5 25 W 33 44639 N 112 09028 W 33 44639 112 09028Built1884WebsitePioneers Cemetery AssociationNRHP reference No 06001317 1 Added to NRHPFebruary 1 2007 Contents 1 History 2 The Smurthwaite House 3 National Register of Historic Places 4 Notable interments 5 Graves 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editPrior to the establishment of the Pioneer and Military Memorial Park there were other cemeteries already in existence as early as 1850 The citizens of the newly founded city became concerned with the old cemetery which was once located between 5th and 7th Avenues and Jackson and Madison Streets near a newly built train station They feared that the sight of the old cemetery would be an unpleasant one to the railroad passengers who would visit the city in the newly established railroad system 2 3 In 1884 the city counsel decided to purchase Block 32 in what archaeologists have now determined were the ruins of a pre Columbian Hohokam community which they named La Villa 4 The families who had their loved ones buried in the old cemetery had them moved to the new one The city also reburied the unclaimed bodies in a common grave in the new cemetery 2 3 On October 8 1884 John R Loosley became the owner of some of the western portion of Block 32 He moved bodies from the potters field of the old cemetery and buried them in what became known as the City or Loosley cemetery In 1888 Lulu G Porter wife of DeForest Porter acquired the south half of Block 32 and had it laid out as a cemetery which is now known as Porter cemetery 5 The Block 32 cemetery is made up of seven historic cemeteries which were in use between 1884 and 1914 Each of the seven cemeteries has its own name the Ancient Order of United Workmen AOUW Independent Order of Odd Fellows IOOF Knights of Pythias K of P Loosley also known as City Cemetery Masons Porter and Rosedale In 1914 a law forbidding further burials within city limits went into effect and the seven cemeteries were declared closed The cemeteries fell into a state of abandonment 2 After years of disrepair the citizens of Phoenix rallied to restore the cemeteries After the cemeteries were restored they were officially designated in May 1988 as the Pioneer and Military Memorial Park It is estimated that there are 3 700 burials however fewer than 600 of these graves have headstones 2 3 The area which comprises the Pioneer and Military Memorial Park is bounded by 13th and 15th Avenues and Jackson and Harrison Streets The main entrance is located at 1317 W Jefferson Street 2 6 In 1930 the Pioneers Cemetery Association was founded The association began the preservation and restoration of the cemeteries in the Pioneers and Military Memorial Park They were also in charge of researching the history behind the burials However their work was interrupted by the death of Thomas Hayden the prime researcher and by World War II The present Pioneers Cemetery Association was formed in 1983 and has continued the work which was previously interrupted by the events previously mentioned The association has a working relationship with the City of Phoenix 5 The Smurthwaite House editSmurthwaite HouseU S National Register of Historic Places nbsp The Smurthwaite HouseLocationOriginally located at 602 N 7th Street moved to 1317 W Jefferson Street Phoenix ArizonaBuilt1897ArchitectCreighton amp MillardArchitectural styleVictorianNRHP reference No 01000479 1 Added to NRHPMay 17 2001The Smurthwaite House was designed and built in 1897 by Creighton amp Millard a local firm for Dr Darius M Purman and his wife Mary The house which was originally located at 602 N 7th Street was intended to be used as a boarding house 7 In 1903 the Purman s sold the house to National Bank of Arizona of Phoenix That same year Captain Trustrim Connell recipient of the Medal of Honor and his wife Ann purchased the house 7 In 1938 it was deeded to their daughter Caroline who married Charles Smurthwaite Later the house was passed on to the Smurthwaite s daughter Carolann Smurthwaite who lived there until her death in 1982 Carolann had willed the house to be jointly administered by the Phoenix Art Museum The Museum of Northern Arizona and the Heard Museum 7 In 1991 the Heritage Fund approved a grant of 50 000 to restore the Smurthwaite House and in 1994 the house was moved to its current location at 1317 W Jefferson Street It currently serves as the office of the historic Pioneer and Military Cemetery 8 The Bird s eye view of Phoenix Maricopa Co Arizona map created in 1885 by Czar James Dyer is on display in the main room of the Smurthwaite House In 1899 Dyer served as Phoenix s acting mayor 9 The interior furnishings and decorations of the Smurthwaite House nbsp The living room of the Smurthwaite House nbsp The interior staircase leading to the second floor of the house nbsp The original lithograph of the Bird s Eye view of Phoenix map created by Czar J Dyer is located inside the Smurthwaite House s main room National Register of Historic Places editThe Smurthwaite House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on May 17 2001 NRHP reference number 01000479 Historic Significance Architecture Engineering Area of Significance Architecture 10 The Pioneer Military and Memorial Park was designated as historical and listed in the National Register of Historic Places on February 1 2007 NRHP reference number 06001317 According to the National Register the Periods of Significance are from 1850 to 1924 11 Notable interments editEvery year Historic Cemetery Walking tours sponsored by the Pioneers Cemetery Association are held 12 Among the notable burials included in the tours are the following 13 14 nbsp Judge John Taylor Alsap nbsp Phillip Lord Darrell Duppa nbsp Henry Garfias nbsp Benjamin Joseph Franklin nbsp King S WoolseyMasons Cemetery Judge John Taylor Alsap Alsap was the first Treasurer of the Arizona Territory He also served as both Speaker of the House and President of the Council in the Arizona Territorial legislature In 1881 he became the first Mayor of Phoenix Alsap died September 10 1886 15 Phillip Lord Darrell Duppa Duppa was an Englishman who is credited with naming Phoenix and Tempe He is also the founder of the town of New River Arizona Duppa died on January 29 1892 16 City Loosley Cemetery nbsp City Loosley Cemetery entranceHenry Garfias Garfias was a Hispanic who became the first marshal of Phoenix Arizona He was also a gunfighter who became the highest elected Mexican American official in the Valley during the 19th century Jacob Dutchman Waltz Waltz was a German immigrant who in the 19th century discovered a gold mine in Arizona and kept its location a secret hence the name Lost Dutchman s Mine The Lost Dutchman Mine is supposedly located in the Superstition Mountains east of Phoenix Waltz died an itinerant poor farmer on October 25 1891 at age 81 According to the accounts of the day A flood came through he hung onto a tree he caught pneumonia 17 King S Woosley Woosley founded one of the first flour mills in the Salt River Valley He served in various positions in the territorial legislature and opened the first ice skating rink in Phoenix Woosley died on June 30 1879 18 Rosedale Cemetery nbsp Rosedale Cemetery entranceBenjamin Joseph Franklin Franklin was a Missouri U S Congressman and later served as U S Consul to China He moved to Arizona in 1896 President Grover Cleveland appointed Franklin Arizona s 12th Territorial Governor Franklin died on May 18 1898 19 Czar James Dyer Dyer once served as councilman and in 1899 as the acting mayor of Phoenix Dyer drew the Bird s Eye view of Phoenix map which is currently on display in the Smurthwaite House Dyer died on March 28 1903 20 Noah M Broadway Broadway who died on November 3 1905 was one of the original settlers of Phoenix He was an American Civil War veteran farmer and sheriff of Maricopa County His farm was located between 7th and 23rd Avenues on the south side of what is now Broadway Road 21 J W Bolton Bolton was a barber who became the first African American Mail carrier in Phoenix Bolton died on December 26 1902 22 23 Robert Plumridge Plumridge served in the California Column of the Union Army and fought against the Confederate Forces in the Battle of Picacho Pass during the American Civil War 24 Porter Cemetery nbsp Porter Cemetery entranceClarence Proctor Colton was a Buffalo Soldier who was a sergeant in Troop L of the 10th U S Cavalry during the Spanish American War On March 27 1900 Proctor committed suicide 25 26 Millard Lee Raymond Raymond served as a Rough Rider of Troop F 1st U S Volunteers Cavalry in Santa Fe New Mexico His unit fought in the Spanish American War in Cuba under the command of Theodore Roosevelt Raymond died on January 11 1899 27 28 Knights of Pythias amp Ancient Order of United Workmen Cemetery nbsp Knights of Pythias amp Ancient Order of United Workmen Cemetery entranceFrederick E Tovrea Tovrea was the 10 year old son of E A Tovrea owner of the Tovrea Land and Cattle Co packing house and the Tovrea Castle in Phoenix The child died on July 17 1898 of appendicitis 29 John Preston Osborn Osborn arrived in Prescott Arizona in 1854 While he lived there he built that town s first hotel The hotel is also considered to be Arizona s first Eventually he moved to the Salt River Valley and assisted in the establishment of Phoenix Osborn died on January 19 1900 Osborn Road in Phoenix is named after him 30 The Rossen Children The children of Dr Roland Rosson whose house the historic Rosson House in Phoenix is listed in the National Register of Historic Places Roland Lloyd Rosson died on February 25 1883 and an Infant Daughter on January 7 1896 22 William Augustus Hancock Hancock laid out the first town site of Phoenix in 1870 Known as the Father of Phoenix he was appointed district attorney in 1871 probate judge in 1875 and was the first sheriff in Maricopa County Hancock died on March 24 1902 22 Tom Graham Graham was the last man killed in the Pleasant Valley War Ed Tewsbury ambushed Graham near the Buttes when he was traveling to Tempe with a load of grain Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery nbsp Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery entranceLindley Orme Orme a former member of the Confederate Army of America once served in the Territorial Council and later as Maricopa County sheriff Orme died on September 24 1900 22 Frank B Moss Moss was the Mayor Fire Chief and Wagon Maker of Phoenix He served two terms in office the first in 1896 and the second 1905 06 He died at the age of 53 from a heart attack while serving as mayor as he ascended the City Hall stairs Graves editTombstones of notable burials in the Pioneer amp Military Memorial ParkListed in the National Register of Historic Places nbsp The grave of John T Alsap in the Masons Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of Phillip Lord Darrell Duppa located in the Masons Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of Jacob Dutchman Waltz located in the City Loosley Cemetery section nbsp The grave of King S Woolsey in the City Loosley Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of Benjamin Joseph Franklin located in the Rosedale Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of Czar J Dyer located in the Rosedale Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of Noah M Broadway located in the Rosedale Cemetery section nbsp The grave of J W Bolton in the Rosedale Cemetery section nbsp The grave of Robert Plumridge in the Rosedale Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of Clarence Proctor located in the Porter Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of Florence Esther Walker wife of J Ernest Walker who died June 13 1909 Her grave is located in the Porter Cemetery section of the cemetery nbsp The grave of Millard Lee Raymond in the Porter Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of Frederick E Tovrea located in the K of P amp A O U W Cemetery section nbsp Grave site of John Preston Osborn located in the K of P amp A O U W Cemetery section nbsp The grave of the Rossen Children in the K of P amp A O U W Cemetery section nbsp The grave of William Augustus Hancock in the K of P amp A O U W Cemetery section nbsp The grave of Tom Graham in the K of P amp A O U W Cemetery section nbsp The grave of Lindley Orme in the Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery section nbsp The grave of Frank B Moss in the Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery section See also edit nbsp Arizona portal nbsp NRHP portalCave Creek Museum History of Phoenix Arizona Children s Museum in Phoenix Martin Auto Museum Phoenix Historic Property Register List of historic properties in Phoenix Arizona Adamsville A O U W Cemetery City of Mesa Cemetery Home Mission Cemetery Double Butte Cemetery Greenwood Memory Lawn Mortuary amp Cemetery Glendale Memorial Park Cemetery Goodyear Farms Historic Cemetery St Francis Catholic Cemetery Historic Pinal CemeteryOther historic Phoenix structures in Phoenix Squaw Peak Inn El Cid Castle Windsor Hotel Pioneer Living History Museum Phoenix Police MuseumReferences edit a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 a b c d e Pioneers Cemetery Association Inc Archived 2014 04 21 at the Wayback Machine a b c Phoenix Government Archived 2014 03 16 at the Wayback Machine La Villa Fast Facts a b Cemetery history National Register of Historic Places a b c Connell Smurthwaite House National Register of Historic Places 2 Library of Congress National Register of Historic Places Smurthwaite House National Register of Historic Places The Pioneer Military and Memorial Park Historic Pioneer amp Military Memorial Park Listed in the National Register of Historic Places PMMP Guide Historic Cemetery Walk List of burials in the Pioneer amp Military Memorial Park Archived 2014 04 21 at the Wayback Machine Goff John S 1983 Arizona Biographical Dictionary Cave Creek Arizona Black Mountain Press p 3 OCLC 10740532 Lord Darrell Duppa Blair Robert 1975 Tales of the Superstitions The Origins of the Lost Dutchman s Legend Tempe Arizona Arizona Historical Foundation p 12 Yuma Sun September 28 2007 Archived October 21 2007 at archive today Biodata Arizona gravestones Fraternal Order of Police Maricopa Lodge 5 a b c d Biographical Profiles of Some Phoenix Pioneers Archived from the original on 2014 03 22 Retrieved 2014 03 21 Documents Robert Plumridge Arizona Burial Arizona Graves 2 Mounton Heather L Tatterson Susan 2020 Graveyards of the Wild West Arizona America Through Time Fonthill Media p 26 ISBN 978 1634992275 Millard Lee Raymond burial Pvt Millard L Raymond d 1899 Tovrea Castle From Puritans to Common FolkExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pioneer amp Military Memorial Park Pioneer amp Military Memorial Park Pioneers Cemetery Association Inc U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Pioneer and Military Memorial Park Pioneer and Military Memorial Park at Find a Grave Ancient Order of United Workmen Cemetery at Find a Grave Independent Order of Odd Fellows Cemetery at Find a Grave Knights of Pythias Cemetery at Find a Grave U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System City Loosley Cemetery Loosley Cemetery at Find a Grave Masons Cemetery at Find a Grave U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Porter Cemetery Porter Cemetery at Find a Grave U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Rosedale Cemetery Rosedale Cemetery at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pioneer and Military Memorial Park amp oldid 1214939210 The Smurthwaite House, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.