Marietta Confederate Cemetery Explained

Marietta Confederate Cemetery
Map Type:USA Georgia
Established:1863
Country:United States
Location:381 Powder Springs Street, Marietta, Georgia 30060
Coordinates:33.9461°N -84.5492°W
Owner:State of Georgia
Graves:3,000
Website:mariettaconfederatecemetery.org
Findagraveid:33381

Marietta Confederate Cemetery is a large Confederate cemetery located in Marietta, Georgia, adjacent to the larger Marietta City Cemetery.[1]

The Marietta Confederate Cemetery is one of the largest burial grounds for Confederate dead. It is the resting place to over 3,000 soldiers from all 11 Confederate states plus Maryland, Missouri, and Kentucky.

The cemetery was established in 1863 as a gift from Jane Glover who was the wife of Marietta's first mayor.[2] It sits on the site of a former Baptist church that was later moved to a new location in downtown Marietta and the land was acquired by John Glover – Marietta's first mayor.[3] There was initially an offer to bury Confederate dead along with dead Union soldiers at the Marietta National Cemetery, but the offer was refused because Marietta officials did not want Confederate dead to be buried near Yankee dead.[4]

Soldiers killed in the battles of Chickamauga (in Tennessee and Georgia), Kolb's Farm and Kennesaw Mountain from the Atlanta Campaign are interred there.

Notable monuments

A 6-pound field cannon originally presented to the Georgia Military Institute (which was in Marietta) by the State of Georgia which was used in the war and captured by Union forces near Savannah. It was later retrieved from an arsenal in New York and contains the Latin inscription "Victrix Fortunae Sapientia" which translates to "wisdom, the Victor over Fortune".

Each Confederate state and some others (Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia) has a marble monument noting the section that its soldiers are buried in.[5]

Inscriptions in the cemetery

Inscriptions on a monument:

Interesting burials

A former black slave, a drummer, William Yopp, who served along with Captain Thomas Yopp in the 14th Georgia Infantry, lived an adventurous life and later lived out the rest of his life in the Confederate Soldiers' Home.[7]

Preservation

The Ladies' Memorial Association owned the cemetery and the Kennesaw Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy helped with its maintenance for a long time. Currently, the Marietta Confederate Cemetery Foundation and Friends of Brown Park, Inc. is committed to the preservation of the cemetery.[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1.  33.9441°N -84.549°W
  2. Web site: Confederate Cemetery, Marietta, Georgia . 2012-12-26 . 2013-01-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130107124029/http://roadsidegeorgia.com/site/marietta_confederate_cemetery.html . dead .
  3. Web site: Parks & Recreation – Cemeteries . Mariettaga.gov . 2011-12-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120104151105/http://www.mariettaga.gov/departments/parks_rec/cemeteries.aspx#3 . 2012-01-04 . dead .
  4. Web site: Parks & Recreation – Cemeteries . Mariettaga.gov . 2020-05-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200601184522/https://www.mariettaga.gov/243/Marietta-National-Cemetery . dead . 2020-06-01 .
  5. http://www.mariettaconfederatecemetery.org/location.html Cemetery website
  6. http://www.mariettaga.gov/sf-docs/parksrec/CemeteryBrochure.pdf{{dead link|date=June 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  7. Book: Pittman . Charles . Ten Cent Bill . 2008 . Tate Publishing . 978-1606962961.
  8. Web site: About Marietta Confederate Cemetery. Marietta Confederate Cemetery Foundation and Friends of Brown Park, Inc. 21 February 2016.