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Lakewood Cemetery

Lakewood Cemetery Memorial Chapel
Lakewood Cemetery Memorial Chapel.jpg
The Byzantine-styled chapel at Lakewood Cemetery is listed on the National Register of Historic Places
Lakewood Cemetery is located in Minnesota
Lakewood Cemetery
Lakewood Cemetery is located in the US
Lakewood Cemetery
Location 3600 Hennepin Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Coordinates 44°56′11″N 93°17′56″W / 44.93639°N 93.29889°W / 44.93639; -93.29889Coordinates: 44°56′11″N 93°17′56″W / 44.93639°N 93.29889°W / 44.93639; -93.29889
Area 250 acres
Built 1908
Architect Harry Wild Jones
Architectural style Byzantine Revival
NRHP Reference # 83003657
Added to NRHP October 20, 1983

Lakewood Cemetery is a large private, non-sectarian cemetery located in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. It is located at 3600 Hennepin Avenue at the southern end of the Uptown area. It is noted for its chapel which is on the National Register of Historic Places and was modeled after the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul, Turkey.

About 250 acres in size, Lakewood memorializes the dead with more than 100,000 monuments and markers. Long considered one of the most beautiful cemeteries in the country, it was modeled after the rural cemeteries of 19th-century France, such as Père-Lachaise in Paris. When Lakewood was established in 1871 rural cemeteries were becoming more popular as part of a growing trend away from churchyard burials in the heart of the city.

In July 1871 Colonel William S. King, local businessman and newspaper publisher, proposed to community leaders of the city that they work together to establish a cemetery "on some of the beautiful locations out near the lakes, where the encroachments of the city would never seriously interfere." In August of the same year a meeting was held for establishing the Lyndale Cemetery Association (Changed to Lakewood in Feb of 1872). According to the minutes of the original meeting recorded by Thomas Lowry, "that after an examination of various localities they had chosen the land owned by William S. King lying between Lakes Calhoun and Harriet." Colonel King agreed to sell his land for the purpose at a cost of $21,000, "to be paid back over a year at 7 percent interest." The first trustees voted to raise $25,000 to purchase the land and make improvements at a time when the cost of a home in Minneapolis was about $500. The money was raised by selling 250 shares of stock at $100 a piece, two-thirds of which was purchased by the trustees themselves.The remaining balance was solicited by a committee and sold to other local investors. In April 1872 Superintendent A.B. Barton and the board of trustees employed C. W. Folsom, Superintendent of Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts to develop plans for the new cemetery. In October 1872 the Association reacquired all stocks that had been sold to the public.


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