Wildwood Cemetery (Pennsylvania)
Wildwood Cemetery is a cemetery located in Loyalsock Township, Pennsylvania just north of the city of Williamsport. Established in 1863 as the main cemetery for Williamsport and its surrounding communities. With a size of 340 acres it is the largest cemetery by size and grave count in Lycoming County, Pennsylvania.[1][2]
Details | |
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Established | 1863 |
Location | |
Size | 340 acres |
No. of graves | Over 70,000 |
The cemetery is split in two by Cemetery Drive, referred to by as Wildwood Drive. East Wildwood contains the cemeteries, crematorium, offices, and all of the larger public mausoleum. West Wildwood is where the military memorial and monument are located, as well as the Praying Hands mausoleum.[3]
The cemetery has an "escape burial hatch". Thomas Pursell, a local firefighter, wanted a burial arrangement for which he or his family could escape in case they were prematurely burial. The resulting design was heavily documented by media in Williamsport and the surrounding areas. There have been six other such hatched built in surrounding cemeteries based on Pursell's original.[4][5]
Notable people buried at Wildwood
- Peter Herdic (died 1888)
- James Gamble (died 1883)
- Robert Porter Allen (died 1890)
- Henry Clay McCormick (died 1902)
- Elias Deemer (died 1918)
- Edgar Raymond Kiess (died 1930)
- Bucky Veil (died 1931)
- Herman T. Schneebeli (died 1982)
- Bob Pellegrini (died 2008)
References
- "Wildwood Cemetery and Crematorium". Retrieved 2020-05-13.
- "Wildwood Cemetery, Williamsport, Lycoming Co, PA". www.usgennet.org. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
- "Lycoming County Genealogical Society Store - Cemetery Records". www.lycominglineage.org. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
- "This Escape Hatch Prevents People From Dying if Accidentally Buried Alive". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
- S, Leo (2019-04-01). "Thomas Pursell's and Wildwood Cemetery of Williamsport, Pennsylvania~". RANDOM Times •. Retrieved 2020-05-13.