Wood National Cemetery


Wood National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It is one of two National Cemeteries in Wisconsin. It encompasses, and as of 2021, it had over 40,000 interments. Outside family members with existing plots and subsequent internments, the cemetery is closed to new interments.

History

A part of the Milwaukee Soldiers Home campus, the cemetery was established in 1871 as Soldier Home Cemetery to inter the remains of soldiers who died while under care in its hospital. In 1937, it was renamed Wood Cemetery in honor of General George Wood, a long-time member of the Board of Managers for the center. The cemetery was then bisected by Interstate 94 in the early 1960s, requiring grave relocation and any plans for expanding the freeway in the future to carefully protect the cemetery's footprint.
Wood Cemetery became a National Cemetery in 1973 and is currently operated by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs. It was the only National Cemetery in Wisconsin until 2015, when Northwoods National Cemetery was established near Rhinelander. The cemetery

Notable monuments

Notable interments