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Private Cemeteries in Louisville, Georgia often have specific restrictions, such as religious affiliation or family connections. Military Cemeteries in Louisville, Georgia are primarily for veterans and individuals who have served in the armed forces, and in some cases, their family members. Public Cemeteries in Louisville, Georgia are open to the general public without any particular restrictions.
We offer detailed information for cemeteries in Louisville, Georgia , including the names of deceased individuals, their birth and death dates, data about relatives, and cemetery locations. Additionally, you can obtain historical records and conduct searches for ancestors interred in Louisville, Georgia .
Our database contains records of burials from 26 cemeteries.
Hill View is the oldest part of the cemetery and has more gothic, taller, majestic, and very detailed monuments.
Below is a list of all 5872 cemeteries in Georgia, organized by town.
Operating as a non-profit organization, Westview remains the largest cemetery in the Southeast today, and one of the largest non-profit cemeteries in the United States.
Marietta Cemeteries The Confederate cemetery, established in 1863, is the largest of its kind in the state. It holds 3,000 soldiers who died in local hospitals, in combat during the Battle of Chickamauga or the Atlanta campaign, or in an 1863 train wreck that occurred north of Marietta.
The Georgia National Cemetery opened for burials on April 24, 2006. The new 775-acre national cemetery in western Cherokee County, Ga., will serve veterans for the next 50 years.