Poplar Grove National Cemetery - Petersburg, Virginia
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member gparkes
N 37° 09.576 W 077° 25.767
18S E 284272 N 4115341
The death of more than 600,000 soldiers in the American Civil War necesitated the need for a National Cemetery system. This, located near Petersburg, Virginia, opened in 1866, now closed for burials, and is maintained by the National Parks Service.
Waymark Code: WM98XY
Location: Virginia, United States
Date Posted: 07/15/2010
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
Views: 1

Throughout the battlefield across Petersburg, the Union soldiers who were killed were burried in very quick order. These often were shallow graves, often without markings of any type. Some graves were marked with wooden crosses and handwritten notes, that weather would wipe away. Others were burried in mass graves. Some field hospitals had cemeteries nearby, and were generally outside the line of fire allowing for more time to bury the dead in a proper fashion.

A national cemetery was not created in Petersburg until 1866. By this time, nature had started taking back its own. A site was selected just south of the city, that had been the encampment of the 50th New York Volunteer Engineers. During the war, they had constructed a pine log church, built in a gothic-style. They named the church, "Poplar Grove."

From across the battlefield nearly 100 individual burial sites with more than 5,000 Union soldiers intered within. Bodies were brought from as far away as Lynchburg, Virginia. The task fell to a group of about 100 men, searching the countryside. Some graves would be found by stakes that marked the ground; others identified by the disturbance in the ground. The "burial corps," as they were known, formed a sort of police call line, spread a yard a part. Each man would be responsible for searching half a yard on either side. And so was the entire battlefield searched. The corps worked for three years, reinterring 6,718 remains; only 2,139 would be identified.

In 1933, the cemetery was transferred from the War Department to the National Park Service. Poplar Grove is only one of fourteen National Cemeteries to be cared for by the National Parks Service. The stone caretakers building today is being used as a Ranger Station. It is open during the summer months, allowing visitors to ask questions and the grounds interpreted for their historic meaning.
Date cemetery was established: 1866

Visiting hours:
Daylight hours - year-round


Website pertaining to the cemetery: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
Please submit a photo(s) taken by you of your visit to the location (non-copyrighted photos only). GPS photos are also accepted with the location in the background, and old vacation photos are accepted. If you are not able to provide a photo, then please describe your visit or give a story about the visit.

We would also like to hear about any of your deceased family members who may be laid to rest in the cemetery.
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