Mount Olivet Cemetery (Baltimore)

Mount Olivet Cemetery in western Baltimore, Maryland is a historic burial ground dating back into the middle 1800s, known as "The Resting Place of Methodist Bishops."[1]

Methodist Episcopal Church Bishops Francis Asbury, John Emory, Enoch George, and Beverly Waugh are all buried here, as well as Methodist leaders Jesse Lee, Robert Strawbridge, and missionaries E. Stanley Jones and Mabel Lossing Jones.[1][2]

The cemetery has fallen victim to significant vandalism, with many grave monuments pushed over face-down from their bases, broken, or completely missing.[2]

Notable interments

gollark: Pi Wars.
gollark: Yep.
gollark: Not pick up with a robotic arm or anything, I mean just grab somehow and push around.
gollark: Specifically, it needs to pick up monochrome colored cubes and put them in a designated location.
gollark: I'm actually working on a robotics thing (at school, in a moderately sized team) which will need to move around objects, and it seems like it'll be quite hard.

References

  1. Lovely Lane United Methodist Church: Mt. Olivet, http://lovelylane.net/home/mt-olivet/, accessed 22 Dec 2013.
  2. Barbara Neel Blizzard, Ron Baublitz, and Donna Weiss: Mount Olivet Cemetery, Baltimore, Maryland, Yesterday and Today, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bjblitzen/Rowles/MountOlivet/MtOlivetCemetery.html, accessed 22 Dec 2013.
  3. United States Congress. "Potts, Richard (id: P000473)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.

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