Knoxville
National Cemetery
939
Tyson Street, NW
Knoxville, TN 37917
Phone: (423) 855-6590 or 6591
FAX: (423) 855-6597 |
Office Hours:
This cemetery is administered by Chattanooga National Cemetery.
Visitation Hours:
Open daily from sunrise to sunset. |
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Burial Space: This
cemetery has space available for cremated remains. We may be able
to accommodate casketed remains in the same gravesite of previously
interred family members.
Acreage: 9.8
Number of
Interments Thru Fiscal Year 2005: 8,959
General Information Kiosk on Site? No
Floral/Ground Regulations: This
Cemetery's Regulations |
Directions
from nearest airport:
The
cemetery is located in the northern section of Knoxville. From the
Knoxville Airport, travel Interstate 129 north approximately 12
miles to Interstate 275. Then travel north about two miles and exit
at Baxter Avenue East to first stop light (Wray Street). Turn right
and travel three blocks to cemetery. |
GENERAL INFORMATION
Chattanooga National Cemetery
administers this cemetery. Please contact them at the telephone number
listed above. A contractor is onsite daily to provide grave maintenance.
GRAVE
LOCATION:
The grave location
of your loved one is furnished on the map included in the burial document
folder. There is a grave locator as you enter the main gate to assist
weekend visitors who may not know the location of the gravesite.
GRAVE
MARKER:
A temporary grave marker
is used to mark the grave following the interment. A permanent grave marker
will be furnished free of charge by the Government without application
from the family. Every effort is made to have the grave marker delivered
and set within 60 days from the day of interment.
FLAGS:
The United States
flag is flown over national cemeteries every day and is flown at half-staff
on the morning of Memorial Day and during interments. Graves are decorated
with small United States flags a few days before Memorial Day and are
removed immediately after the holiday. Flags are not permitted at any
other time.
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HISTORICAL
INFORMATION
Knoxville National Cemetery
is located in Knox County, in the northern section of the city of Knoxville,
Tenn.
Union Maj. Gen. Ambrose E.
Burnside established the cemetery during the Civil War after the siege
of Knoxville and subsequent Battle of Fort Sander.
Capt. E.B. Chamberlain, the assistant quartermaster, was assigned the
task of designing the national cemetery at Knoxville. The first interments
were remains exhumed from Cumberland Gap, Concord and many other regional
sites. Chamberlain’s design and system for recording interments
was so effective that, in 1866, Gen. E.G. Whitman, observed that the cemetery
had been “the only burial ground of Union soldiers…originally
laid out and conducted to the present time in a manner and on a system
that render[ed] it suitable to be converted into a national cemetery without
material alteration or change, or removal of a single body.”
Knoxville National Cemetery was listed on the National Register of Historic
Places in 1996.
Memorial
and Monuments
The
Union Soldier monument, known locally as the Tennessee or Wilder monument,
is an unusual, large Gothic Revival-style memorial that was erected between
1890 and 1901.
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NOTABLE
BURIALS
Medal of Honor Recipients
Sergeant Troy A. McGill, (World
War II) U.S. Army, Troop G, 5th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division.
Los Negros Islands, Admiralty Group, March 4, 1944. Sergeant McGill was
returned to the U.S. from the Air Force Mausoleum Manila #1, Philippine
Island and interred at Knoxville on Jan. 25, 1951 (Section B, Grave 6294).
Private
Timothy Spillane, (Civil War) Company C, 16th Pennsylvania Cavalry. Hatcher's
Run, Va., Feb. 5-7, 1865 (Section A, Grave 3319).
Other
Burials
Among those interred at Knoxville National Cemetery is Brigadier General
Robert Reese Neyland, retired US Army. While General Neyland was attending
West Point Military Academy, he was an aide to the Commandant of West
Point, General Douglas Macarthur. After he assumed his military duties
he was assigned as an ROTC instructor at the University of Tennessee,
where he also served as football coach. During World War II General Neyland
was recalled to serve his country. He was elevated to the rank of Brigadier
General at that time and was one of the top-ranking officers in the China-Burma-India
field of operation. Brigadier General Robert Reese Neyland and his wife
Ada are interred in Section X, Grave 16A.
Group
Burials:
We have several group burials in Knoxville National Cemetery.
13 are interred in Section X, Grave 7, 8, 9 A/B from World War II.
5 are interred in Section X, Grave 46 A/B from World War II.
3 are interred in Section X, Grave 31 A/B from World War II.
6 are interred in Section X, Grave 57 A/B from World War II.
4 are interred in Section X, Grave 58 A from World War II.
19 are interred in Section C, Grave 3255 war period is unknown.
US
Confederate Soldier:
Captain George M. Coleman, Company D, 9th Kentucky Regiment, Civil War
(Section D, Grave 2538).
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FLORAL/GROUNDS
REGULATIONS
Cemetery policies are conspicuously
posted and readily visible to the public.
Floral arrangements accompanying
the casket or urn at the time of burial will be placed on the completed
grave. Natural cut flowers may be placed on graves at any time of the
year. They will be removed when they become unsightly or when it becomes
necessary to facilitate cemetery operations such as mowing.
Artificial flowers and potted
plants will be permitted on graves during periods when their presence
will not interfere with grounds maintenance. As a general rule, artificial
flowers and potted plants will be allowed on graves for a period extending
10 days before through 10 days after Easter Sunday and Memorial Day.
Christmas wreaths, grave blankets
and other seasonal adornments may be placed on graves from Dec. 1 through
Jan. 20.
Permanent plantings, statues,
vigil lights, breakable objects and similar items are not permitted on
the graves. The Department of Veterans Affairs does not permit adornments
that are considered offensive, inconsistent with the dignity of the cemetery
or considered hazardous to cemetery personnel. For example, items incorporating
beads or wires may become entangled in mowers or other equipment and cause
injury.
Permanent items removed from
graves will be placed in an inconspicuous holding area for one month prior
to disposal. Decorative items removed from graves remain the property
of the donor but are under the custodianship of the cemetery. If not retrieved
by the donor, they are then governed by the rules for disposal of federal
property.
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