Mount Hope Cemetery (Lansing, Michigan)

Mount Hope Cemetery
Details
Established1874
Location
1709 E. Mount Hope Ave,
Lansing, Michigan
CountryUnited States
Coordinates42.71167748°N 84.52708125°W / 42.71167748; -84.52708125
No. of graves≈24,000
Websitehttps://www.lansingmi.gov/449/Mt-Hope-Cemetery
Find a GraveMount Hope Cemetery

Mount Hope Cemetery is a cemetery in Lansing, Michigan.

History

Mount Hope Cemetery opened as the new city cemetery for Lansing, Michigan in June 1874. It was formerly the John Miller Farm. Between 1874 and 1881, the city vacated the Lansing City Cemetery and moved about 1,000 graves to Mount Hope.

Frederick W. Higgins, superintendent of Detroit's Woodmere Cemetery, planned the drives and Henry Lee Bancroft, superintendent of the Lansing City Cemetery, developed the landscape.

A section was platted in 1874 for the State Reform School (later the Boys' Vocational School) for the remains of 61 boys who died between 1856 and 1933.

The city's Civil War Soldier's Monument, a large obelisk, was dedicated in 1878.

In 2014, a grave marker for the final victim of the 1927 Bath School bombing was dedicated.

As of 2017, there were 23,820 people buried at Mount Hope Cemetery.

Notable burials

See also