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New Mount Sinai Cemetery
United States historic place From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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New Mount Sinai Cemetery is a 52-acre (21 ha) cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri. Its first burial was in 1853, and its rural cemetery landscape design was laid out in 1907.[2] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.[1] As of the 2005 listing, the cemetery also has a Modern-style community mausoleum, three private mausoleums (Art Deco, Modern, Neo-Classical), and a formal Japanese garden.[2]
Its listing includes 39 contributing buildings, 2 contributing sites, and 2 other contributing structures.[1] Deemed as contributing resources were:
- the 52-acre (21 ha) rural cemetery itself,
- its traditional, old Jewish graveyard, which are sections A, B, and F of the cemetery,
- the red granite and wrought iron gate,
- the monumental Art Deco entrance gate,
- Greek Revival chapel,
- Queen Anne "House of Comfort" building,
- 37(?) small mausoleums in Greek Revival, Egyptian Revival, Classical Revival, Art Deco, Modern styles.[2]
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History
The cemetery has a chapel, built in 1905, which is no longer in use. It has a storage vault below to temporarily hold 4 caskets. The building housing the office, built in 1916, was originally a rest house and luncheon spot to accommodate the horse drawn funerals that took an entire day.[3]
There have been 10,925 people buried in the cemetery as of December 31, 2009. Besides the public mausoleum and single graves, there are 1,441 platted family lots, 40 private mausoleums, 2 memorial mausoleums, and 24 sarcophagi. The newest section of the cemetery, encompassing 5.5 acres of single graves and family lots, opened in the spring of 2008.[3]
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References
External links
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