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Denver Cemeteries – Historical Background
Finding the cemetery where your relatives are buried in the Denver area can be a challenge. The earliest
cemeteries, Mount Prospect and Acacia, have been moved and their records have not survived. To
complicate matters, death records in Denver were not required until 1900 and they were not consistently
recorded until about 1925.
Mount Prospect was the first organized cemetery in Denver. It was located on an old Arapahoe Indian
burial ground, today this area is known as Cheesman Park. This site was selected by William Larimer and
William Clancey during the winter of 1858-1859. The Kansas Territorial Legislature granted a charter on
27 February 1860. Jack O’Neill, a victim of a gunfight, was the first burial on 30 March 1859. The
cemetery was eventually divided into sections for Roman Catholic burials (Mount Calvary), Masonic and
Improved Order of Odd Fellows, Jewish (Hebrew Burying and Prayer Ground) and Mount Prospect or
Prospect Hill. Mount Prospect, later called City Cemetery, had areas set aside for burials of paupers,
Chinese, and members of the Grand Army of the Republic a Civil War Union veterans organization.
In 1872 the City of Denver applied to Congress for title to the land. On 15 November 1873 Denver gained
ownership and Mount Prospect became City Cemetery. Riverside Cemetery opened in 1876 and burials in
City Cemetery declined. In 1890 Denver was granted permission by Congress to use the land for a park.
In 1893 burials were ordered stopped and 788 bodies were removed to Riverside Cemetery. In August
1893 the Denver Park Commission gave notice that families had 90 days to remove their loved ones
remains and that after that time no bodies were to be removed as the entire area would be planted in grass.
About 4200 bodies from City Cemetery remain beneath the sod of Cheesman Park.
Mount Calvary was the Roman Catholic section of Mount Prospect and later City Cemetery. In 1890
Denver was granted permission to use the cemetery lands for a park and the Diocese of Denver secured an
injunction preventing enforcement of the order against their property. The last burial in Mount Calvary
was in 1908. In 1891 Mt. Olivet Cemetery in Wheat Ridge opened and many of the bodies from Mount
Calvary were removed there. In 1950 the remaining 8,600 bodies were removed to Mount Olivet. Today
this is the site of the Denver Botanic Gardens.
The Jewish section was known as Hebrew Burying and Prayer Ground. The local Jewish congregations
did not hold title to their section and were not able to prevent the closure of the cemetery. In 1896 the
Hebrew Cemetery Association purchased a section known as Emanuel in Riverside Cemetery. In 1911
Congregation Emanuel purchased 15 acres within Fairmount Cemetery, also called Emanuel. In 1923 the
Jewish Cemetery Committee reported that removals from the Hebrew Burying and Prayer Ground had
been completed.
Acacia Cemetery, located in the town of Highland between what is now 29th and 32nd Avenues and Tejon
and Zuni Streets, was purchased in 1866 by Union Masonic Lodge No. 7, Denver Masonic Lodge No. 5,
and Denver Chapter No. 12, Royal Arch Masons. The cemetery was opened and lots were sold in May of
1867. The southwest quarter of the tract was sold to the Improved Order of Odd Fellows, I.O.O.F. The
cemetery was open until the late 1870’s when the bodies were removed to City Cemetery. In 1872
sections for the Masons and Odd Fellows were set aside in City Cemetery. In 1893 the bodies were again
moved, this time to Riverside Cemetery. In 1881 the entire tract of Acacia Cemetery was sold to George
Tritch who filed a plat under the name of the “Union Addition” in the City of Denver.
062004
Object Description
| Title | Denver Area Cemeteries |
| Creator(s) | Jeffery, James K. |
| Summary | Brief historical summary of the locations, history, and religious affiliations of sixteen historical cemeteries within the Denver, Colorado metropolitan area. |
| Date | Undated |
| Physical Description | 2 p. |
| Subject |
Cemeteries--Colorado--Denver. Cemeteries--Colorado--Denver--History. Denver (Colo.)--Genealogy. |
| Filename | Denver Area Cemeteries.pdf |
| Format-Medium |
Document |
| Digital origin | born digital |
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