Mobile, Alabama - Confederate Rest in Magnolia Cemetery
Salute! Hallowed Grounds. This Confederate Rest section in Magnolia Cemetery, Mobile, Alabama, was established on November 25, 1861. It was initially named Soldiers Rest, to serve as a burial ground for Confederate soldiers. It contains approximately 1,100 war dead, including six Confederate generals, with notable figures like General Braxton Bragg interred there, his grave marked by a large urn draped with an officer’s overcoat. The section features many large, elaborate monuments, including an obelisk commemorating the crew of the Confederate submarine H.L. Hunley. (photos taken March 13, 2023, RJ)
Located within the 120-acre Magnolia Cemetery (founded in 1836), Confederate Rest is one of several significant sections, alongside the Mobile National Cemetery (established 1866 for Union soldiers and veterans) and Jewish Rest (1844). The cemetery, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986, is known for its Victorian-era funerary art and historic preservation efforts by the Friends of Magnolia Cemetery, formed in 1984 to address decades of neglect.
#headstone #oldcemetery #cemetery #mobileal #military #dixie #southern #CSA #Dixieland #civilwar #history
Located within the 120-acre Magnolia Cemetery (founded in 1836), Confederate Rest is one of several significant sections, alongside the Mobile National Cemetery (established 1866 for Union soldiers and veterans) and Jewish Rest (1844). The cemetery, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986, is known for its Victorian-era funerary art and historic preservation efforts by the Friends of Magnolia Cemetery, formed in 1984 to address decades of neglect.
#headstone #oldcemetery #cemetery #mobileal #military #dixie #southern #CSA #Dixieland #civilwar #history
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