St. Stephen Rural Cemetery
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St. Stephen Rural Cemetery
Cemetery Details
Year established: 1856
Country: Canada Flag of Canada
Location: St. Stephen, New Brunswick
Coordinates: 45°07′12″N 67°10′49″W / 45.120042, -67.180208
Type: Public
Owned by: Municipality
Size: 65 acres
Number of gravesites: 12,000+
Find A Grave: Findagrave

St. Stephen Rural Cemetery is a municipal cemetery established in April of 1856 at the town of St. Stephen, New Brunswick, Canada. The cemetery encompasses 65 acres of land with approximately 12,000 burials. There are over 20 kilometres of avenues and paths.

St. Stephen is a Canada/United States border town, separated by the St. Croix River. It is a place where crossing the bridge for employment, shopping, hospitalization, or just visiting friends, is an almost daily part of normal life. The two close-knit communities have shared services for more than two hundred years. Until nearly the second half of the 20th Century, a number of Americans were born in St. Stephen and vice versa.

Cross-border marriages have been common and there are several American Civil War veterans buried in the St. Stephen cemetery, including a Medal of Honor recipient as well as Brigadier-General John Curtis Caldwell who was one of the eight generals to accompany the body of assassinated President Abraham Lincoln on its journey from Washington D.C. to Lincoln's home in Springfield, Illinois. Many members of the Ganong family of chocolate makers are interred here.


Notable burials:


References

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