City of Miami Cemetery
Miami City Cemetery is located in Miami
Miami City Cemetery
Miami City Cemetery is located in Florida
Miami City Cemetery
Miami City Cemetery is located in the United States
Miami City Cemetery
LocationMiami, Florida
Coordinates25°47′36″N 80°11′33″W / 25.79333°N 80.19250°W / 25.79333; -80.19250
MPSDowntown Miami MRA
NRHP reference No.88002960[1]
Added to NRHPJanuary 4, 1989

The Miami City Cemetery is a historic cemetery in Miami, Florida, United States. It is located at 1800 Northeast 2nd Avenue. It is the only municipal cemetery in Miami-Dade County. On January 4, 1989, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.

History

Miami city cemetery was located one-half mile north of the city limits on a narrow wagon track county road. The first burial, not recorded, was of an elderly black man on July 14, 1897. The first recorded burial was a white man named Graham Branscomb, a 24-year-old Englishman who died on July 20, 1897, from consumption. The city of Miami cemetery is subdivided with whites on the east end and the blacks population on the west end.

Blacks provided the primary labor force for building of Miami but were confined by clauses in land deeds to the north west section of Miami now known as Overtown.[2] In 1915, the Beth David congregation began a Jewish section. Two other prominent sections are the circles: the first to Julia Tuttle, the "Mother of Miami," buried in 1898; the second, a memorial to Civil War veterans erected by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Sixty-six Confederate and twenty-seven Union veterans are buried here. Other sections are dedicated to Catholics, American Legionnaires, Spanish–American War veterans, and miscellaneous veterans along the north and south fence lines. Among the 9,000 burials are pioneer families such as the Burdines, Peacocks, and Dr. James Jackson. This site has the only known five oolitic (limestone) gravestones worldwide. Unique tropical plants make it a tropical oasis.[3]

The Miami City Cemetery is one of the few cemeteries where the owners of the plot actually hold its deed. Approximately 1,000 open plots remain within the cemetery but there are strict criteria for burial. A decedent must be either the deedholder or able to prove familial relationship to the owner. Friends of the family are not allowed. Currently between ten and twenty burials occur every year.

In 1997 Enid Pinkney and Penny Lambeth began a restoration project of the cemetery. It has been a major transformation.

Notable burials

See also

References

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. News release May 5, 2009 Miami Dade County Commissioner Audrey Edmonson, District 3
  3. "City of Miami Cemetery" Waymark
  4. Bradley, Kelly (2021-03-12). "Lawson E. Thomas, the first Black judge in the South since reconstruction, Part 3". Caplin News. Retrieved 2023-12-16.
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