The Maplewood Cemetery, formerly known as the New Pulaski Cemetery, is a historic cemetery in Pulaski, Tennessee, U.S..
History
The cemetery was established as the New Pulaski Cemetery in 1855.[2] The oldest section, known as Old Maplewood, contains the burials of whites and blacks.[2] In 1878, another section was added for African-American burials.[2] The name was changed to Maplewood Cemetery in 1880.[2] It was further expanded in 1907 and the 1940s.[2]
The first person to be buried in Old Maplewood was Robert H. Watkins, a planter.[2] The black burials are unmarked, while the white burials are often adorned with sculptures of angels and obelisks.[2] There is a sub-section for the 85 veterans of the Confederate States Army buried there, including a monument dedicated by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1913.[2] Other burials include Masons, and 40 veterans of the United States Colored Troops.[2]
Three of the original December 24, 1865 founders of the Ku Klux Klan in Pulaski, Tennessee are also buried here: John C. Lester (OM-141-2); James R. Crowe (OM-169-2), and; J. Calvin Jones (OM-164-10).