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National Harmony Memorial Park

National Harmony Memorial Park
Details
Established July 1, 1962
Location Landover, Maryland, U.S.
Country United States
Coordinates 38°54′27″N 76°52′54″W / 38.907532°N 76.881731°W / 38.907532; -76.881731Coordinates: 38°54′27″N 76°52′54″W / 38.907532°N 76.881731°W / 38.907532; -76.881731
Type Private, secular
Owned by Stewart Enterprises, Inc.
Size 142 acres (570,000 m2)
Website www.nationalharmony.com
Find a Grave National Harmony Memorial Park
The Political Graveyard National Harmony Memorial Park

National Harmony Memorial Park is a private, secular cemetery located at 7101 Sheriff Road in Landover, Maryland, in the United States. Although racially integrated, most of the individuals interred there are African American. In 1960, the 37,000 graves of Columbian Harmony Cemetery in Washington, D.C., were transferred to National Harmony Memorial Park's Columbian Harmony section. In 1966, about 2,000 graves from Payne's Cemetery in D.C. were transferred to National Harmony Memorial Park as well.

Washington businessman Louis H. Bell owned 107.5-acre (435,000 m2) Forest Lawn Cemetery on Sheriff Road in Landover, Maryland. Bell also owned Prince George's Nurseries, and planned to add an additional 65 acres (260,000 m2) of nursery land to the cemetery. In nearby Washington, D.C., Columbian Harmony Cemetery nearing its capacity. The lack of burials and a perpetual care endowment left the cemetery $3,000 in debt every year by 1956.

In 1957, Bell offered the owners of Columbian Harmony Cemetery a 25 percent stake in the new cemetery and offered to pay all relocation costs in exchange for the cemetery's property in D.C. Although Columbian Harmony rejected this offer, negotiations continued. Bell eventually agreed to also establish a perpetual care fund, designate a 30-acre (120,000 m2) section of the cemetery as the "Harmony Section", and allowed the Columbian Harmony Cemetery's board to appoint half the members of the new board of directors of the new cemetery association.

Beginning in May 1960, approximately 37,000 graves were moved to National Harmony Memorial Park. The District of Columbia Department of Health had to draft and win approval of a whole new set of regulations to govern the relocations. A D.C. district court agreed to issue a single exhumation order, than review thousands of cases. All the heirs of those buried at Columbia Harmony Cemetery were contacted and their permission to move the graves secured. More than 100 workers exhumed, recrated in new coffins, moved, and reburied the dead. The re-interments were completed on November 17, 1960. It was the largest cemetery move in the nation's capital, and cost $1 million.

Unfortunately, the relocation agreement did not cover the existing memorials and monuments. According to the Maryland Historical Trust, none of the original grave markers were retained. Furthermore, most of the remains at Columbian Harmony Cemetery were transferred and reburied without identifying which person was being reburied.


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