Evergreen Cemetery (Bloomington, Illinois)
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Evergreen Cemetery, in Bloomington, Illinois, is also known as Evergreen Memorial Cemetery.
The cemetery was originally two separate cemeteries, adjacent to each other. The first was the Bloomington Cemetery, founded in 1850 by the Bloomington Cemetery Association; the other was Evergreen Cemetery, founded in 1860. The Bloomington Cemetery was funded by city tax dollars, while Evergreen was privately funded and maintained.[citation needed] The website of the current cemetery claims Evergreen was founded in the early 1820s.[1]
Over the years, Evergreen suffered from vandalism and deterioration. Community action in the 1950s and 1960s forced the city of Bloomington to buy out the owners of Evergreen Cemetery in 1963, creating the merged Evergreen Memorial Cemetery.
The grounds of Evergreen Memorial Cemetery, which are maintained by staff and community members, include a Civil War burial section.
The McLean County Museum offers tours of the cemetery the last Saturday & Sunday of September and the first Saturday & Sunday of October. Funds raised by the tour are used to preserve the cemetery. The Evergreen Cemetery Discovery Walk combines historical research by Museum volunteers, costumed actors from Illinois Voices Theatre, and Evergreen Memorial Cemetery into a week-long outdoor theatrical production. People who contributed to central Illinois’ colorful history are brought to life through costumed actors assuming the intriguing characters of McLean County’s ancestors. Presented is not only the "who's who" of McLean County but also the regular day-to-day voices from the past, people who have contributed to the growth, diversity and success of McLean County in unique and innovative ways.
Notable persons interred
- David Davis — Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States and United States Senator[1]
- Ulysses F. Doubleday — U. S. Representative
- Jesse Fell — founder of Illinois State University
- Louis Fitzhenry — U. S. Representative
- Benjamin F. Funk — U. S. Representative
- Isaac Funk — Illinois State Senator
- Dorothy Louise Gage — niece of L. Frank Baum's wife, Maud Gage Baum, and basis for Dorothy Gale in his book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz[1][2]
- Asahel Gridley — Illinois State Senator
- John McNulta — U. S. Representative
- William W. Orme — Civil War General
- Charles "Old Hoss" Radbourn[1] — Major League Baseball player, member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame
- John M. Scott — Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois
- Giles Alexander Smith — Civil War General
- Adlai Stevenson I — Vice President of the United States[1]
- Adlai Stevenson II — United States Ambassador to the United Nations, Governor of Illinois, Presidential Candidate
- Thomas F. Tipton — U. S. Representative
- Carl Vrooman — Assistant Secretary of Agriculture under President Woodrow Wilson
References
- ^ a b c d e "History". Bloomington, Illinois: Evergreen Memorial Cemetery. 2010-04-13. Retrieved 2010-07-23.
- ^ Wills, Christopher (1982-10-06). "Dorothy's trip to Oz linked to baby's death". Indiana Gazette. Associated Press. p. 13. Archived from the original on 2014-08-08. Retrieved 2014-08-08 – via Newspapers.com.
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