Home > United States > North Carolina > Harnett County > Greenwood Cemetery

Search North Carolina Death Records

 

Greenwood Cemetery
Dunn, Harnett County, North Carolina

Greenwood Cemetery

GPS: 35.303594, -78.621006

908 S McKay Ave
Dunn, NC 28334

Published: January 20, 2017
Total records: 5,068

Greenwood Cemetery is owned and maintained by the City of Dunn.

History

Greenwood Cemetery is one of Dunn's oldest cemeteries. It was established on June 25, 1888, when two people died, William F. Jones, age 32, son of D. and M. M. Jones, and Ralph Jerome Jones, age 14 months, son of D. A. and V. A. Jones. The town of Dunn had no municipal cemetery and therefore sought a location to bury these two. They approached Henry Pope and his wife Eliza Pope, who lived about a mile from what was then the town limits, and was near the site of the old Greenwood School House.

The Popes agreed to bury these two on their property, and laid them with their heads and feet pointing directly east and west.

Town officials eventually negotiated terms with the Popes to purchase the land these bodies were buried in, and on September 14, 1888 a deed was signed to sell 5,058 square yards of land (centered directly on the circle of the cemetery where the gazebo lies today), for the sum of $50.00. The circle is said to be the exact location of the old Greenwood School House.

Because the two original bodies were laid to rest exactly east and west, other bodies were laid parallel to them, exactly the same way. By contrast, the streets in the town of Dunn were laid in accordance to the railroad tracks. This explains why the streets within the cemetery do not conform to the streets of the town.

Cemetery Records

Records published here were acquired from the City of Dunn, NC on January 20, 2017. Dates of death range from 1858 to 2016.


Surname Index:

cemetery records

A free online library of cemetery records from thousands of cemeteries across the world, for historical and genealogy research.

Clear Digital Media, Inc.

What makes us Different?

Single-sourced, not crowd-sourced

Each transcription we publish comes from a single-source, be it the cemetery office, government office, church office, archived document, a tombstone transcriber. Other websites already do an excellent job of crowd-sourcing a single cemetery together. But genealogists also need to see the original records from a single source. That's what we offer.