- Source: Dayton National Cemetery
Dayton National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in the city of Dayton in Montgomery County, Ohio. It encompasses 116.8 acres (47.3 ha) and as of July 18, 2019, had 55,359 interments. In January, 2014, it was one of only fourteen cemeteries to be designated as a national shrine. A new 2,000 niche columbarium was dedicated on July 24, 2014. It is one of a few National Cemeteries with their own Honor Squad. Since its formation, unless refused by family and during a few weeks the National Cemetery Administration disallowed military honors in their cemeteries, no veteran has been buried without a Rifle Salute in addition to "Taps" and the folding and presentation of the Flag. It is also the only National Cemetery with the remains of a funeral tunnel which once allowed deceased veterans to be removed from the Home Hospital to the cemetery. Plans are in process to restore the entrance into the tunnel to its original form. Dayton National Cemetery is believed to be the only cemetery in America with a live bugler each weekday other than Arlington National Cemetery.
History
The cemetery was established in 1867 as a place to inter veterans who died while under the care of the Central Branch of the National Asylum for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers and Seamen, located in Dayton. It was the third such home authorized by Abraham Lincoln, March 3, 1865, just before his death. The first interment, of Civil War veteran Cornelius Solly, was on September 11, 1867. The National Asylum became part of the newly formed Department of Veterans Affairs in 1930 and evolved into today's Dayton VA Medical Center. The cemetery was administered as part of the medical center until 1973, when it was transferred to the National Cemetery Administration.
Dayton National Cemetery is one of eight National Cemeteries with the remains of veterans from every major conflict the United States has been involved in dating back to the American Revolutionary War. 650 Colored Troops are interred at Dayton National Cemetery, one of the largest collection of Colored Troops' graves which links the cemetery even further with Lincoln since he authorized the creation of Colored Troops units.
Noteworthy monuments
The Dayton Soldiers' Monument was constructed between 1873 and 1877. It is a 30-foot (9.1 m) marble column on a granite base. Dedicated by President Rutherford B. Hayes.
A memorial to 33 soldiers of the War of 1812 buried in this cemetery. A bronze plaque on a boulder.
A memorial to all Masonic Veterans was erected in 2018. Dedicated by Eric R. Schau, Grand Master and the Grand Lodge of Ohio.
Notable interments
Medal of Honor recipients
Henry W. Downs (1844–1911), for action in the American Civil War
Oscar Wadsworth Field (1873–1912), for action in the Spanish–American War
George Geiger (1843–1904), for action at the Battle of Little Bighorn during the Indian Wars
John H. James (1835–1914), for action in the Civil War
Charles A. Taggart (1843–1938), for action in the Civil War
Others
Big Joe Duskin (1921–2007), American blues and boogie-woogie pianist
Joe Henderson (1937–2001), jazz saxophonist
Tommy Henrich (1913–2009), Major League Baseball player
James Hobbs (1819-1880), Scout for the Texas Rangers, author of Wild Life in the Far West (1872)
Stubby Magner (1888–1956), Major League Baseball player
Christian Null (1770–1832), Revolutionary War Soldier
Marsena R. Patrick (1811–1888), U.S. Army general
Johnnie Wilder Jr. (1949–2006), R&B/funk vocalist
Paul P. Yoder (1897–1965), Ohio Lieutenant Governor (1937–1939)
Emma L. Miller (1828–1914) the first Female VA employee, the first woman to be commissioned in the US Army and the first woman to be provided full military honors.
Other interments
One British Commonwealth war grave, of a Canadian Army Corporal (died 1947)
References
External links
A Nation Repays Its Debt:The National Soldiers' Home and Cemetery in Dayton, Ohio, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan
Historic American Landscapes Survey (HALS) No. OH-3, "Dayton National Cemetery, 4100 West Third Street, Dayton, Montgomery, OH"
U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Dayton National Cemetery
Dayton National Cemetery at Find a Grave
CWGC: Dayton National Cemetery
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Paul Lawrence Dunbar
- Departemen Veteran Amerika Serikat
- Daftar wilayah dalam Sistem Taman Nasional Amerika Serikat
- Ruby Hirose
- Hans von Ohain
- Charles Bassett
- Bapak Pendiri Amerika Serikat
- Joseph Conrad
- Sam Rayburn
- John W. McCormack
- Dayton National Cemetery
- United States National Cemetery System
- Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum
- Dayton Veterans Affairs Medical Center
- Brookside Cemetery (Dayton, Oregon)
- Camp Chase
- List of cemeteries in Ohio
- Dayton, Indiana
- Marsena R. Patrick
- Henry W. Downs