File #: RS2022-1822   
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 10/11/2022 In control: Metropolitan Council
On agenda: 10/18/2022 Final action: 10/18/2022
Title: A Resolution recognizing the 200th anniversary of the Nashville City Cemetery.
Sponsors: Colby Sledge, Russ Bradford, Tanaka Vercher, Burkley Allen, Delishia Porterfield, Zulfat Suara
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A Resolution recognizing the 200th anniversary of the Nashville City Cemetery.

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WHEREAS, the City Cemetery is the oldest and continuously operated public cemetery in Nashville; and

WHEREAS, on March 9, 1820, the Mayor of Nashville and Aldermen purchased four acres of land from Richard Cross which were located "on the plains, south of town, for its burying ground" and the cemetery opened on January 1, 1822; and

WHEREAS, approximately fourteen years later the cemetery outgrew its original site, and more acres were acquired; and

WHEREAS, by 1850 the cemetery was the final resting place for over 11,000 people of every race, religion and economic status; and

WHEREAS, since its opening, there have been 20,000 interments in the City Cemetery; and

WHEREAS, among the people buried in the cemetery are four of Nashville's first settlers, namely, founder of Nashville, James Robertson, his wife Charlotte Reeves Robertson, and John and Ann Robertson Cockrill; and

WHEREAS, additionally American Revolutionary War soldiers such as Lipscomb Norvell, Joel Lewis, Anthony Foster; four Confederate generals: Felix Zollicoffer, Bushrod Johnson, Richard Ewell, and Samuel Read Anderson; the man who named the American flag "Old Glory," Captain William Driver, fifteen mayors of Nashville and former Tennessee Governor William Carroll, are interred at the Nashville City Cemetery; and

WHEREAS, two of the original Fisk Jubilee Singers, Mabel Lewis Imes and Ella Sheppard Moore, slaves and free persons of color interred prior to the Civil War, are also among those buried in the grounds of the small and peaceful cemetery; and

WHEREAS, in 1972 the City Cemetery was listed in the National Register of Historic Places because of its historical and architectural significance; and

WHEREAS, the brick building, located beyond the Hill family vault in the circle, was built in 1947, designed by Nashville architect Edwin A. Keeble (1905-1979); and

WHEREAS, that through the Master Gard...

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