Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery
Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery | |
---|---|
Details | |
Established | 1854 |
Location | 1600 Franklin Avenue, Santa Rosa, California |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 38°27′20″N 122°42′17″W / 38.45556°N 122.70472°W |
Type | Rural |
Owned by | City of Santa Rosa |
Website | https://www.srcity.org/1044/Santa-Rosa-Rural-Cemetery |
Find a Grave | Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery |
The Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery is a cemetery located in Santa Rosa, California. Originally founded in the 1850s as four distinct cemeteries: the Old Rural Cemetery; the Fulkerson Cemetery; the Moke Cemetery; and the Stanley Cemetery- the grounds have been operated together as a single cemetery by the City of Santa Rosa since 1979.
History
The Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery was founded in November 1854 as a place to bury Thomas W. Mize (1832-1854), a 31-year-old father who had emigrated to California from Iowa during the California Gold Rush two years prior, after he had accidentally drown in a pond.[1] At the time, the area was a wooded hillside beyond the city limits owned by Olivier Beaulieu (1810-1896), a French-Canadian born farmer.[2]
Over the next several years many of the city's early residents chose to be buried on the same hillside, and in 1867 the Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery Association was formally established and seventeen acres were designated for future burials.[3]
During the 1930s the cemetery began to fall into disrepair. Several sections were partitioned and sold off, forming the adjacent Fulkerson; Moke; and Stanley Cemeteries.[4] In 1965 the Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery Association, which had previously disbanded, reformed to take care of the grounds which had become overgrown and damaged by vandalism.[5]
In 1979, all five cemeteries were merged and ownership was transferred to the City of Santa Rosa.[6] In 1997 the cemetery was made a historic landmark. The cemetery contains over 5,500 burials and offers volunteer run historic tours.[7] It is adjacent to the Santa Rosa Memorial Park cemetery.
Notable burials
- James B. Armstrong, (1824-1900) businessman and American Civil War officer
- John All Barham, (1843-1926) lawyer and Member of Congress (1895-1901)
- Thomas J. Geary, (1854-1929) lawyer and Member of Congress (1890-1895)
- Barclay Henley, (1843-1914) lawyer and Member of Congress (1883-1887)
- Mark Lindsey McDonald, (1833-1917) businessman and railroad tycoon
- William Wood Porter, (1826-1907) American Civil War officer and Justice of the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court (1885-1889)
- Thomas Larkin Thompson, (1838-1898), newspaper publisher, Secretary of State of California (1883-1887), and Member of Congress (1887-1889)
References
- ^ Beck, John (January 2016). "Piecing Together the History of Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery". Sonoma Magazine. Retrieved 31 July 2025.
- ^ "Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery: Where History Comes to Life". Retrieved 31 July 2025.
- ^ "Santa Rosa Rural Cemetery: Where History Comes to Life". Retrieved 31 July 2025.
- ^ "History of the Cemetery". City of Santa Rosa. Retrieved 31 July 2025.
- ^ "History of the Cemetery". City of Santa Rosa. Retrieved 31 July 2025.
- ^ "History of the Cemetery". City of Santa Rosa. Retrieved 31 July 2025.
- ^ "History of the Cemetery". City of Santa Rosa. Retrieved 31 July 2025.