Camp
Nelson
National Cemetery
6980
Danville Road
Nicholasville, KY 40356
Phone: (859) 885 - 5727
FAX: (859) 887- 4860 |
Office Hours:
Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., excluding federal
holidays
Visitation Hours:
Open daily from dawn to dusk. |
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Burial Space: This
cemetery has space available to accommodate casketed and cremated
remains.
Acreage: 30.2
Number of
Interments Thru Fiscal Year 2005: 12,034
General Information Kiosk on Site? Yes
Floral/Ground Regulations: This
Cemetery's Regulations |
Directions from
nearest airport:
Cemetery
is located 20 miles Southeast of Lexington Blue Grass Airport. From
Airport take Man O' War Rd. East to Nicholasville Rd. Take a right
onto Nicholasville Rd./HWY 27 South. Follow Nicholasville Rd./HWY
27 South for approximately 15 miles. The cemetery will be on your
left before the Kentucky River. |
GENERAL INFORMATION
Military Funeral Honors
Military Funeral Honors may be obtained through your local funeral home.
If a funeral home
is not involved in your arrangements, please call our office and one of
our staff members will assist you in arranging for Military Funeral Honors.
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HISTORICAL
INFORMATION
Camp Nelson National Cemetery
is located about seven miles southeast of Nicholasville in Jessamine County,
Ky. In 1866, the U.S. government appropriated approximately eight acres
here to establish a cemetery. Of the original tract, about seven acres
became the cemetery proper and the remainder formed a driveway extending
from the main entrance to the old Danville Turnpike. An additional acre
was purchased in 1874 that adjoined the southeast corner of the cemetery.
During the Civil War, Camp
Nelson had an important role in supplying the U.S. Army, caring for the
sick and wounded and acting as an enlistment station for African-American
soldiers. The post was established in 1863 and contained numerous shops
for blacksmith work and the construction of wagons and ambulances, as
well as buildings for storing supplies and artillery equipment. Camp Nelson
included barracks, headquarters buildings and a 700-bed hospital. There
were three types of medical facilities on the post: a hospital for military
prisoners; an acute general hospital; and the rehabilitation unit. In
addition, Camp Nelson served as a major center for the recruitment of
black soldiers of the U.S. Colored Troops (USCT). After the war, the base
was designated an official refugee camp by the federal government and
placed under the direction of the Freemen’s Bureau.
By 1863, the Army had selected
a small plot of land next to the hospital as a graveyard for the men who
died at Camp Nelson. Life at the military camp was often harsh and men
fell victim to disease and common illnesses. A total of 379 men were buried
here, designated Graveyard No. 1, between June 1863 and July 1865. A second
area, Graveyard No. 2, was later added; it is the present location of
the national cemetery. According the cemetery records, approximately 1,180
men were buried here by February 1866.
After the end of the Civil
War, the federal government initiated a program to locate and reinter
Union dead in national cemeteries. As a result, in June and July 1868,
a total of 2,023 remains were removed from areas in Kentucky such as Frankfort,
Richmond, London and Covington and reinterred at Camp Nelson National
Cemetery. Because of the camp’s significance as a USCT recruiting
base, a large number of these soldiers are interred at Camp Nelson. The
remains of Confederate prisoners of war originally buried at Camp Nelson
National Cemetery were all removed, either to the Confederate lot in the
cemetery at Nicholasville or local private cemeteries. With the exception
of two graves removed from Covington and alleged to be Confederate soldiers,
there are no Confederates interred at Camp Nelson.
The cemetery has been substantially
expanded, although the historic section is enclosed by a stone wall and
features a fully restored superintendent’s lodge built in 1870.
Camp Nelson National Cemetery was placed on the National Register of Historic
Places in 1998.
Monuments
and Memorials
The Daughters of the Union erected a granite monument dedicated in the
memory of Union Soldiers who fought in the Civil War around 1995.
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NOTABLE
BURIALS
Medal
of Honor Recipients
Private William M. Harris, (Indian Campaigns) Company D, 7th U.S. Cavalry.
Little Big Horn, Mont., June 25, 1876 (Section U., Grave 3)
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FLORAL/GROUNDS
REGULATIONS
Camp Nelson National Cemetery
is not responsible for any items left at gravesites.
Floral arrangements (up to
six) accompanying the casket or urn at the time of burial will be placed
on the completed gravesite by cemetery staff. Natural cut flowers may
be placed on graves at any time. They will be removed when they become
unsightly or when it becomes necessary to facilitate cemetery operations
such as mowing.
Temporary metal containers,
provided by the cemetery, are available at various sites on cemetery grounds.
Please limit one per gravesite. Cemetery provided floral containers are
the only floral containers allowed in the cemetery. Perma-vases are not
permitted nor are they sold at Camp Nelson.
Artificial flowers and/or potted
plants, in unbreakable containers only (cardboard, plastic, metal), are
permitted on gravesites from Oct. 10 until April 15. They will also be
permitted on graves 10 days before and 10 days after Easter Sunday and
Memorial Day.
Items are subject to removal
on the first and third Fridays during mowing season, and depending on
the added frequency of mowing more often, up to twice a week.
Depending on the growing season,
artificial flowers/potted plants may have to be removed to accommodate
the early mowing season, up to twice per week.
Christmas wreaths, grave blankets,
and related arrangements will be permitted on graves from Dec. 1 until
Jan. 20. Grave floral blankets may not be larger than two by three feet,
please do not wrap them in plastic, as it destroys the turf.
Floral items and other decorations
may not be attached to headstones or markers. Floral stands and saddles
are prohibited.
Unauthorized decorations such
as permanent plantings, statues, vigil lights, upright metal flag holders,
and breakable objects of any kind and similar commemorative items are
not permitted on the gravesites or on the monuments.
Understanding that families
may desire to keep certain floral arrangements, we have in place a procedure
that, upon the family’s written request, cemetery personnel will
place the arrangement in a designated location for 30 days, after which,
arrangements will be disposed of.
The staff at Camp Nelson National
Cemetery want to thank you for your cooperation in helping us to make
this cemetery a national shrine, a final resting place of Honor and Dignity
in memory of the veterans of this great nation.
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