Fort
Rosecrans
National Cemetery
P.O.
Box 6237
San Diego, CA 92166
Phone: (619) 553-2084
FAX: (619) 553-6593 |
Office Hours:
Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Closed federal holidays except Memorial Day and Veterans Day.
Visitation Hours:
Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday 9:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. |
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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: 77.5
Number of
Interments Thru Fiscal Year 2005: 88,826
General Information Kiosk on Site? Yes
Floral/Ground Regulations: This
Cemetery's Regulations |
Directions
from nearest airport:
Cemetery is located Southwest (Pt.
Loma) section of San Diego. From San Diego Municipal Airport, travel
Harbor Drive/Pt. Loma west two miles to Rosecrans Street (California
Highway 209) then south on Highway 209 approximately three miles
to the cemetery. |
GENERAL INFORMATION
Military
Funeral Honors
Military Funeral Honors are provided by the following services. Your local
funeral director can assist you with obtaining honors.
Air Force
- March Air Force Base
Army - Ft. Irwin or local National Guard units
Marine Corps - MCRD, San Diego
Navy - 32nd Street Naval Base, San Diego
82nd Airborne Detail (Volunteers)
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HISTORICAL
INFORMATION
Situated in San Diego County
on the Fort Rosecrans Military reservation, the cemetery is located approximately
10 miles west of San Diego, overlooking the bay and the city.
Many Fort Rosecrans interments
date to the early years of the California Territory, including the remains
of the casualties of the battle of San Pasqual. Shortly after the United
States declared war on Mexico in May 1846, Brigadier Stephen Watts Kearney
was tasked with conquering Mexico’s northern provinces, New Mexico
and California. While Kearny demonstrated his considerable gift for administrative
command with his acquisition of the New Mexican territory, he faced a
more difficult task in California. Expecting a show of force from the
Mexican Californios, Kearney set out west from New Mexico. Upon reaching
California, Kit Carson intercepted him and his men, who informed him the
territory had been taken by American settlers in the Bear Flag Revolt.
Kearney sent 200 of his men back to New Mexico with the news and continued
forward with one-third of his force. Unfortunately, the success of the
revolt had been exaggerated and, before reaching their destination, Kearney
and his men encountered a group of Californios intent on keeping more
U.S. troops out of their homeland.
In the subsequent Battle of
San Pasqual, 19 of Kearney’s men and an untold number of Californios
lost their lives. Initially, the dead were buried where they fell, but
by 1874 the remains had been removed to the San Diego Military Reservation.
Eight years later, the bodies were again reinterred at what is now Fort
Rosecrans National Cemetery. In 1922, the San Diego chapter of the Native
Sons and Daughters of the Golden West had a large boulder brought from
the battlefield and placed at the gravesite with a plaque affixed that
lists the names of the dead.
Another notable monument in
Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery commemorates the deaths of 62 sailors
in a boiler explosion aboard the USS Bennington. The Bennington, which
had just returned from maneuvers in the Pacific, was anchored in San Diego
Harbor. On July 21, 1905, the crew was ordered to depart in search for
the USS Wyoming, which had lost a propeller at sea. At approximately 10:30
a.m., an explosion in the boiler room ripped through the ship, killing
and wounding the majority of the crew. Two days later the remains of soldiers
and sailors were brought to the post cemetery and interred in an area
known as Bennington Plot.
Fort Rosecrans became a National
Cemetery on Oct. 5, 1934. The decision to make the post cemetery part
of the national system came, in part, due to changes in legislation that
greatly increased the number of persons eligible for burial in a national
cemetery. Grave space in San Francisco National Cemetery then grew increasingly
limited. In addition, southern California was experiencing a phenomenal
population growth during this period, and there was a definitive need
for more burial sites.
Monuments
and Memorials
The granite and bronze USS Wasp CV-7 memorial commemorates the loss of
fellow shipmates during Battle of Guadalcanal on Sept. 15, 1942.
The San Diego chapter of the
Native Sons and Daughters of the Golden West installed the San Pasqual
monument in 1922 to honor those soldiers who lost their lives in the 1846
Battle of San Pasqual during the Mexican War. The monument is comprised
of a stone boulder with a bronze plaque mounted on it.
The USS Bennington monument
is a tall granite obelisk dedicated to the men who lost their lives on
that ship in San Diego Harbor on July 21, 1905. The monument was dedicated
on Jan. 7, 1908.
The Ommaney Bay CVE-79 monument
is an etched granite memorial to the men lost in action when the ship
was bombed in January 1945.
The granite Taffy 3 monument
was dedicated on Oct. 24, 1996, in memory of the men who died during the
1944 Battle of Leyte Gulf (Philippines) and in subsequent battles of the
Pacific.
The granite USS Gambier Bay
monument was dedicated on Oct. 25, 1996, in memory of the men who lost
their lives during the 1944 Battle of Leyte Gulf (Philippines) and in
subsequent battles of the Pacific. Family members and survivors donated
the monument.
The USS Hoel, USS Johnston,
and USS Samuel B. Roberts monument is a large granite memorial dedicated
in 1995 to the men who died on those ships in the 1944 Battle of Leyte
Gulf (Philippines).
The USS St. Lo, CVE-63, and
Composite Squadron VC-65 was erected in1994 to the memory of the men who
died on those ships in the 1944 Battle of Leyte Gulf (Philippines).
A monument dedicated to the
Mormon Battalion was erected in 1998.
The Patriots of America memorial
was dedicated in 1999 by the California State Society of the Founders
and Patriots of America to honor all Americans who answered the call to
arms.
The 3rd Infantry Division
monument was dedicated on Feb. 16, 2002. The granite memorial is dedicated
to their fallen comrades.
NOTABLE
BURIALS
Medal
of Honor Recipients
Quartermaster Second Class Charles Francis Bishop (Mexican Campaign),
Seizure of Vera Cruz, U.S. Navy. USS Florida, Mexico, April 21, 1914 (Section
O, Grave 4562).
Commander Willis W. Bradley
(World War I), U.S. Navy. USS Pittsburgh (Section O, Grave 2925).
Major Mason Carter (Indian
War Campaign), 5th U. S. Infantry. Bear Paw Mountain, Mont., Sept. 30,
1877 (Section PS-4, Grave 102).
Staff Sergeant Peter S. Connor
(Vietnam Conflict), U.S. Marine Corps, Company F, 2nd Battalion. Quang
Ngai Province, Republic of Vietnam, Feb. 25, 1966 (Section A-E, Grave
1005).
Boatswain's Mate William S.
Cronan, U.S. Navy. USS Bennington, San Diego, Calif., July 21, 1905 (Section
T, Grave 534).
Lieutenant Junior Grade Albert
L. David (World War II), US Navy. USS Pillsbury French West Africa, June
4, 1944 (Section OS, Grave 125-A).
Corporal James L. Day (World
War II), U.S. Marine Corps. Ryukyu Islands, Okinawa, May 14-17, 1945 (Section
P, Grave 1748).
Captain Jesse Farley Dyer (Mexican
Campaign), U.S. Marine Corps. Vera Cruz, April 21, 1914 (Section P, Grave
1606).
Vice Admiral Middleton S. Elliott
(Mexican War), U.S. Navy. Vera Cruz, April 21-22, 1914 (Section P, Grave
2828).
Captain Michael John Estocin
(Vietnam Conflict), U.S. Navy. Haiphong, North Vietnam, April 20 &
26, 1967 (Section MA, Grave 112).
Lieutenant Junior Grade Donald
A. Gary (World War II), U.S. Navy. Japanese Home Islands near Kobe, Japan,
March 19, 1945 (Section A-1, Grave 3-B).
Seaman Ora Graves (World War
I), U.S. Navy. USS Pittsburgh, July 23, 1917 (Section W, Grave 1208).
Second Lieutenant Howard Hanneken
(World War I), U.S. Marine Corps. Grande Rivera, Republic of Haiti, Oct.
21 & Nov. 1, 1919 (Section C, Grave 166-D).
Gunnery Sergeant Jimmie Earl
Howard (Vietnam), U.S. Marine Corps, Company C, 1st Reconnaissance Battalion.
Republic of Vietnam, June 16, 1966 (Section O, Grave 3759).
Sergeant Ross L. Iams (Haitian
Campaign), U.S. Marine Corps. USS Connecticut, Fort Riviere, Republic
of Haiti, Nov. 17, 1915 (Section P, Grave 2930).
Ensign Herbert Charpoit Jones
(World War II), U.S. Navy. USS California, Dec. 7, 1941 (Section G, Grave
76).
Coxswain John Edward Murphy
(Spanish American War), U.S. Navy. Santiago, Cuba, June 1898 (Section
OS, Grave 363).
Sergeant James Irsley Poynter
(Korean War), U.S. Marine Corps. Sudong, Korea, Hill 532, Nov. 4, 1950
(Section O, Grave 729).
Sergeant Anund C. Roark (Vietnam
War), U.S. Army. Kontum Province, Vietnam, May 16, 1968 (Section O, Grave
1855).
Sergeant Henry Frank Schroeder
(Spanish American War), U.S. Army, Company L, 16th U.S. Infantry. Carig,
Philippine Island, Sept. 14, 1900 (Section S, Grave 854).
Lieutenant Commander Robert
Semple (Mexican War), U.S. Navy. Vera Cruz, April 21, 1914 (Section OS-A,
Grave 192).
Lieutenant William Zuiderveld
(Mexican War), U.S. Navy. Vera Cruz, April 21, 1914 (Section A-1, Grave
9-B).
Other
Burials
Major Reuben H. Fleet, World War I aviator, interred in the cemetery.
The Reuben H. Fleet Space Theater and Science Center in San Diego was
named after Major Fleet.
Laurence Stallings was a screenwriter
with over two dozen writing credits, i.e. What Price Glory."
General Holland Smith, U.S.
Marine Corps, commanded FMF in the Pacific during World War II and led
the "island hopping" campaign in central Pacific.
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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. They will be removed when they become unsightly or when it becomes
necessary to facilitate cemetery operations such as mowing.
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.
Artificial flowers and potted
plants will be permitted on graves during periods when their presence
will not interfere with grounds maintenance. The cemetery director, in
coordination with the network office, determines these periods for each
cemetery depending on climate and other factors. 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 December 1
through January 20. The donor may secure floral items and other decorations
in place. They may not be secured to headstones or markers.
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 donor, they are then governed by the rules for disposal of Federal
property.
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