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El Campo Santo Cemetery

Workman Family Cemetery
Cemetery.1.JPG
The cemetery's mausoleum
El Campo Santo Cemetery is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
El Campo Santo Cemetery
El Campo Santo Cemetery is located in California
El Campo Santo Cemetery
El Campo Santo Cemetery is located in the US
El Campo Santo Cemetery
Location 15415 E. Don Julian Rd., Industry, California
Coordinates 34°1′7″N 117°57′45″W / 34.01861°N 117.96250°W / 34.01861; -117.96250Coordinates: 34°1′7″N 117°57′45″W / 34.01861°N 117.96250°W / 34.01861; -117.96250
NRHP Reference # 74000520
Added to NRHP November 20, 1974

El Campo Santo is a cemetery located at the Workman and Temple Family Homestead Museum, 15415 East Don Julian Road, in City of Industry, California.

As one of the oldest private cemeteries in Southern California, El Campo Santo contains the remains of the pioneering Workman-Temple family as well as Pío Pico, the last governor of Alta California, and other prominent pioneer families. Within its low brick walls, the one-half acre cemetery features a Neoclassical mausoleum and a small cemetery plot surrounded by a Gothic Revival cast-iron fence.

In the early 1850s, the family of William Workman (1799-1867) established El Campo Santo, or "the sacred ground," as a cemetery solely for the use of their family. Along with a cemetery plot enclosed by an ornate cast-iron fence, they built a Gothic Revival brick chapel dedicated to Saint Nicholas by Bishop Thaddeus Amat of Los Angeles. Among the first to be buried here was William Workman's brother David Workman (1797 - 1855), who was killed in an accident while driving cattle to the gold fields in Northern California.

At the turn of the century, the cemetery was abandoned and its brick chapel destroyed by fire. Walter P. Temple, a grandson of the Workmans, successfully filed a lawsuit preventing any further desecration of the cemetery. In 1917, he was able to purchase the cemetery and the surrounding 75 acres (300,000 m2) and began restoration. In place of the chapel, however, he built a cast stone Neoclassical mausoleum and moved the remains of his family inside. In 1921, he also transferred the remains of Pío Pico and his wife, Ygnacia Alvarado de Pico, from old Calvary Cemetery on North Broadway in Downtown Los Angeles, which was being relocated, and had them entombed in the mausoleum.


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