![]() Sun rays at dusk
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Shown within North Carolina | |
Details | |
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Established | 1798 |
Location | Jct. of NC 54 and County Club Rd., NW corner, Chapel Hill, North Carolina |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 35°54′39.36″N 79°2′38.91″W / 35.9109333°N 79.0441417°WCoordinates: 35°54′39.36″N 79°2′38.91″W / 35.9109333°N 79.0441417°W |
Type | Public |
Owned by | Town of Chapel Hill |
Size | 6.98 acres (0.01 sq mi; 2.82 ha) |
No. of graves | ~ 1600 |
Website | Link |
Find a Grave | Old Chapel Hill Cemetery |
The Political Graveyard | Old Chapel Hill Cemetery |
Old Chapel Hill Cemetery
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NRHP Reference # | |
Added to NRHP | June 3, 1994 |
Old Chapel Hill Cemetery is a graveyard and national historic district located on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
The land was a land grant to the University of North Carolina by the State of North Carolina. The land encompassed 125 acres (51 ha), and was sold for five shillings on October 21, 1776. The cemetery currently covers 6.98 acres (2.82 ha). The first recorded burial was George Clarke, a Burke County student at the university, who died September 28, 1798. His headstone was not placed until several years later. By January 28, 1994, 1,621 burials had been performed. The cemetery is now almost full, and all of the plots have already been bought. In 1922, the town took over responsibility for maintaining the cemetery, and in 1988, the ownership changed over to the University.
A low rock wall was built around the cemetery in 1835 at the cost of $64.41. The school officially named the cemetery "College Graveyard," as opposed to "Village Cemetery," like the Chapel Hill residents called it. Five sidewalks divide the cemetery into six sections. Two of the sections were reserved for African-American burials because there were no black church cemeteries in town. A low rock wall divides the two segregated sections (Sections A and B) from the rest. The Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies were the first to establish plots. In the other sections, there are administrators and professors, as well as prominent public officials, business leaders, and artists from the area. During the Civil War, Confederate soldiers were buried there.
There are many different styles of grave markers represented in the cemetery. Many of the early family plots are marked by monuments and obelisks with smaller tablets marking individual graves. There are also uninscribed fieldstones, headstones, ledgers, boxtombs, and tomb-tables in the newer sections. Marble and granite were used most frequently, but stone and concrete can also be found.