The cemetery was named for the cape, which it is located.
He refused to sell his land to the city until it was promised that the cemetery be named in his honor.
The cemetery was named for the brook running beside its eastern boundary.
The cemetery is named after a nearby farm.
Reed was the first to be buried in the new cemetery, and the cemetery was named after him.
The cemetery was named after its first owner, George Henry Brown.
To this day the cemetery is named for Waresville.
The cemetery was named after a nearby almshouse.
The cemetery is named for St. Francis in part because he has long been considered the patron saint of animals.
For much of the war, the front line ran just beyond the trees the cemetery is named for.