Fort Gibson National Cemetery

Coordinates: 35°48′17″N 95°13′45″W / 35.80472°N 95.22917°W / 35.80472; -95.22917
From USApedia
Fort Gibson National Cemetery
File:Ftgibson cem gates.jpg
The Podge Cast
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Details
Location
1423 Cemetery Road
Fort Gibson, Oklahoma
CoordinatesLua error in Module:Coordinates at line 489: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
SizeScript error: No such module "ConvertIB".Script error: No such module "ConvertIB".48.3 acres
No. of interments>25,000 (2021)
Website[1]
Find a GraveFort Gibson National Cemetery

Fort Gibson National Cemetery is a United States National Cemetery located inside of the town of Fort Gibson, in Muskogee County, Oklahoma. It encompasses 48.3 acres (19.5 ha), and as of 2021 had more than 25,000 interments.

History

File:Old FTG-crop.jpg
Cemetery flag pole circa. early 1900s

Fort Gibson was established in 1833, on a plot of land within the Cherokee nation. It is at what is considered to be the end of the Trail of Tears. Frontier life was hard, yellow fever was common, and at least three separate cemeteries were created between 1833 and 1857 when the Fort was abandoned.

In 1863 the Fort was remanned by Brigadier General James G. Blunt. In 1868 the National Cemetery was established in a 7-acre (2.8 ha) plot, and all of the nearby cemeteries had their interments transferred to it. This included the remains of many civilians.

Fort Gibson National Cemetery was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 20, 1999.[citation needed]

Noteworthy monuments

Notable interments

  • Medal of Honor recipients
John Haddoo (1851–1877), Indian Wars (cenotaph)
First Lieutenant Jack C. Montgomery (1917–2002), recipient for action in World War II
Private First Class John N. Reese Jr. (1923–1945), recipient for action in World War II
  • Others
Captain Sonuk Mikko (Billy Bowlegs) (c. 1810–1859), Seminole who fought for the Union in the American Civil War
Paul "Buddy" Burris (1923–2007), professional football player
Joel Elliott (1840–1868), Civil War soldier and officer
Benjamin Paddock (1926–1998), FBI 10-most wanted criminal in the 1960s, father of Stephen Paddock (1953–2017), who was responsible for the 2017 Las Vegas shooting
Theodore M. Risenhoover (1934–2006), United States Congressman
Vivia Thomas (?–1870), figure of a local legend that she was the daughter of a wealthy Boston family, and that she was abandoned at the wedding altar by a soldier who was assigned to Fort Gibson. She disguised herself as a man so she could pass as a soldier and travelled to the Fort alone, confronted him and killed him. She later died of pneumonia that she was said to have contracted while repeatedly braving cold and harsh weather to visit his grave site.

See also

  • Sam Houston – regarding Houston's wife, Talahina, who is buried here.

References

External links

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