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Grandview Cemetery, Johnstown

Coordinates: 40°19′0″N 78°55′35″W / 40.31667°N 78.92639°W / 40.31667; -78.92639
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Grandview Cemetery
The Unknown Plot area, containing more than 700 unidentified victims of the 1889 Johnstown Flood
Map
Details
Established1885 (1885)
Location
801 Millcreek Road, Johnstown, Pennsylvania
Coordinates40°19′0″N 78°55′35″W / 40.31667°N 78.92639°W / 40.31667; -78.92639
Size235 acres (95 ha)
No. of gravesOver 70,000
Find a GraveGrandview Cemetery

Grandview Cemetery is an American cemetery that is located at 801 Millcreek Road in Johnstown, Pennsylvania.

History and notable features

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The cemetery association that operates Grandview was founded in 1885 to accommodate Johnstown's rapidly growing population. The first interment was that of Lucretia Hammond of Kernville (now a part of Johnstown), who was buried on April 30, 1887.[1]

The land for the cemetery, west of the city on Yoder Hill, was purchased from the Cambria Iron Company.[1]

During the late 1880s, Millcreek Road, a steep and winding mile-long street, was built to facilitate public access to the cemetery's original entrance, but in 1904, cemetery overseers found it necessary to create a new entrance to the cemetery at Bucknell Avenue.[1]

The cemetery is best known due to the aftermath of the Johnstown Flood of 1889. Many of the flood's 2,209 victims are buried here. A section of the cemetery called the "Unknown Plot" contains the bodies of 777 flood victims who could not be identified, and a monument to the flood victims was purchased by the state of Pennsylvania and dedicated on May 31, 1892 before an estimated crowd of 10,000 that included the governor of Pennsylvania.[1]

In January 2024, the total number of interments at Grandview was more than 70,000. The cemetery contains forty-seven burial sections and more than 235 acres (0.95 km2), and is one of the largest in Pennsylvania.[1]

Notable burials

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e [1], Grandview Cemetery on Johnstown, Pennsylvania website accessed September 7, 2009
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