| Maplewood Cemetery | |
|---|---|
| World War II memorial honoring Carl D. Whitfield Jr. in Maplewood Cemetery | |
Interactive map of Maplewood Cemetery | |
| Details | |
| Established | 1872 |
| Location | 1621 Duke University Road Durham, North Carolina |
| Country | United States |
| Coordinates | 35°59′37″N78°55′33″W / 35.99361°N 78.92583°W |
| Owned by | City of Durham |
| Size | 120 acres |
| No. of graves | > 22,000 |
| Website | Maplewood Cemetery |
| Find a Grave | Maplewood Cemetery |
Maplewood Cemetery is a historic cemetery in Durham, North Carolina. Many notable local politicians, industrialists, and civic leaders are buried in the cemetery. [1]
Maplewood Cemetery was established in Durham's West End neighborhood in 1872. [2] The land was previously owned by William H. Willard, who received $1500 in the sale. [2] The cemetery was historically for Whites, and served Durham's upper-class families during racial segregation, with Beechwood Cemetery serving the prominent families within the Black community. [3] [4]
A section of the cemetery, known as the World War Veterans Plot, is dedicated to veterans of World War I, World War II, and the Korean War. [5]
The cemetery includes graves of forty Confederate States Army and Confederate States Navy veterans of the American Civil War. In 2015, the Sons of Confederate Veterans spent $3,000 to build a Confederate memorial at the cemetery. The granite block with a bronze plaque was vandalized with graffiti written across it saying "Black Lives Matter" and "Tear It Down". [6] It was vandalized a second time in 2019, with "cement or another hard substance" smeared across the plaque. [7]