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South-View Cemetery facts for kids

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South-View Cemetery
Details
Established April 21, 1886
Location
1990 Jonesboro Rd SE, Atlanta, Georgia
Country United States
Type Private
Size 100 acres (40 ha)
No. of interments 80,000

South-View Cemetery is a historic African-American-founded cemetery located approximately 15 minutes from downtown Atlanta, Georgia. An active operational cemetery on over 100 acres of land, it is the oldest African-American cemetery in Atlanta, Georgia and the oldest African-American “non eleemosynary” corporation in the country. Founded in 1886, it has since served as the burial place for many leaders in the civil rights movement including Julian Bond and John Lewis. Martin Luther King Jr. was originally buried here but was later moved to the King National Historic Park in Atlanta.

History

Founded February 1886, the cemetery was an effort of nine African-American businessmen including Jacob McKinley, George W. Graham, Robert Grant, Charles H. Morgan, John Render and Albert Watts, all who wanted a safe, secure place where their family members could be buried with dignity in the midst of backlash to Reconstruction.. The State of Georgia approved its charter in April 1886.

Albert H. Watts, grandson of co-founder Albert Watts, served as Southview Cemetery's President-Treasurer from 1977 until his death in 2001. Current President, Winifred Hemphill, several stockholders, Board members and members of the staff are descendants of the founders.

The cemetery has both perpetual care and non-perpetual care areas. All new lots are sold with perpetual care, but many historic family plots were not. As a result, some portions of the cemetery have "suffered from neglect". A non-profit foundation was created in 2004 to raise money, conduct preservation projects and provide care for historic parts of the cemetery.

A cell phone tour of the cemetery was created in a collaborative effort with Oakland Cemetery to provide biographical details about African Americans interred at the two cemeteries. Visitors can obtain a site map at the visitors center, and each of the 14 stops on the tour is marked with a granite marker. The visitor can call a phone number and dial each stop number as they arrive at it, to hear information.

The cemetery celebrated its 125th anniversary in 2011, and at that time Atlanta mayor Kasim Reed gave it the city's Phoenix Award for its contributions to the city. For many years South-View was paid by the city of Atlanta to provide spaces for African-Americans buried at city expense.

Two printed guidebooks to the cemetery have been published.

Notable interments

Twenty-two people are buried in the cemetery that have or have had schools in the Atlanta Public Schools named for them. With the exception of Martin Luther King Jr., who is buried at the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park, all the deceased pastors of Atlanta's historic Ebenezer Baptist Church are buried here as of 2016.

Veterans who served in every war since World War I are buried in the cemetery, including two members of the Tuskegee Airmen. An annual ceremony as part of Wreaths Across America has been held in December starting in 2010.

Notable people buried here include:

  • Hank Aaron (February 5, 1934 -January 22, 2021), former Major League Baseball Hall of Fame player known for breaking Hall of Famer Babe Ruth's 714 home run record, finishing with 755 career home runs.
  • Moses Amos, Georgia's first licensed African-American pharmacist, grandfather of artist Emma Amos
  • Ludie Clay Andrews, the first African-American granted a nursing license by Georgia
  • Samuel Howard Archer, 5th president of Morehouse College, namesake of several Atlanta Public Schools
  • Walt Bellamy (24 Jul 1939 - 2 Nov 2013), a former Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame professional basketball center in the National Basketball Association who won a gold medal in the 1960 Olympic Games who played fourteen seasons with the Chicago Packers/Zephyrs, Baltimore Bullets, New York Knicks, Detroit Pistons, Atlanta Hawks and New Orleans Jazz. Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1993, Bellamy was a charter member of the Indiana University Athletic Hall of Fame, inducted in 1982.
  • Fred C. Bennette, civil rights leader, aide to Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • Jesse B. Blayton, radio entrepreneur and civil rights activist
Grave of Horace A. Bohannon, South-View Cemetery, Atlanta in 2010
Grave of Walter Drake Westmoreland, South-View Cemetery, Atlanta in 2010

Former interments

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