Winchester National Cemetery
Winchester National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in the city of Winchester in Frederick County, Virginia. Administered by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, it encompasses, and as of the end of 2005, it had 5,561 interments. It is closed to new interments.
The cemetery was used for burials of Union soldiers. The Stonewall Confederate Cemetery was for Confederate soldiers.
History
The land around Winchester National Cemetery was used for burials as early as 1862, but after the Civil War additional land was appropriated by the federal government and it was officially dedicated on April 8, 1866. The land was not legally transferred to the U.S. government until Dec. 1, 1870, when the landowner, Jacob Baker, was paid $1,500 for the tract and the deed was signed and executed.Numerous Union soldiers from surrounding battlefields were reinterred here, including those from the different battles of Winchester, the Battle of Front Royal, Battle of New Market, Battle of Harpers Ferry, as well as actions at Snickers Gap, Martinsburg, West Virginia, and Romney, West Virginia.
The cemetery grounds underwent significant renovations during the 1930s, adding walls, maintenance buildings, and improving the headstones.
Winchester National Cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.
Notable monuments
- There are 14 monuments to Union regiments, corps, and states that either are represented by some of the soldiers buried in the cemetery and/or had participants in the 3rd Battle of Winchester. The oldest monument dates to 1864 and was erected for the 38th Massachusetts Infantry. The monuments are as follows:
- * 12th Connecticut Infantry Monument
- * 13th Connecticut Infantry Monument
- * 18th Connecticut Infantry Monument
- * 14th New Hampshire Infantry Monument
- * 114th New York Infantry Monument
- * 123rd Ohio Infantry Regiment Monument
- * 34th Massachusetts Infantry Monument which includes a marble bust of Col. George D. Wells that sits atop a granite base
- * 38th Massachusetts Infantry Monument
- * 3rd Massachusetts Cavalry Monument
- * a Massachusetts Monument features a bronze soldier atop a granite base
- * a Pennsylvania Monument
- * two monuments for the 8th Vermont Infantry
- * a monument to the 6th Army Corps.
- There are also two "monuments," typical to National Cemeteries created for reinterred Union soldiers. They are both seven feet, six inches in height, and are made of an original cast iron seacoast artillery tube, secured by a concrete base. One is located on each side of the flagpole. There is no inscription on either monument.
- An upright historical marker typical of those erected by the Virginia Department of Historic Resources is also near the opening of the cemetery, with a focus on the Third Battle of Winchester.