
The Historic
Evergreen Cemetery
This Wondrous Place
About Evergreen Cemetery
n February of 1856, the ground now known as Evergreen Cemetery received its first burial from the newly named community of Gainesville, Florida. The infant daughter of a well-to-do cotton merchant and landowner James Tilatha Thomas and his first wife, Elizabeth Jane Hall Thomas, died at the age of 10 days. They laid her to rest in a place of serene natural beauty beneath a young cedar tree, roughly in the center of vast acreage owned by Thomas that extended from Boulware Springs north to present-day Depot Avenue. Eight months later, in October 1856, Elizabeth died at the age of 40 years and Thomas buried her in the same grave as their infant daughter. Thus, the grave is a double grave, and is marked by a rare and elegantly simple headstone carved by W.A. White, a well-known stonemason from Charleston.


Evergreen Cemetery
Burial Search Portal
This page serves as the dedicated Burial Search portal for Evergreen Cemetery in Gainesville, Florida, providing a digital gateway to locate gravesites within the historic, city-operated cemetery. Users can explore a highly detailed, interactive map—complete with section, lot, and space overlays
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Evergreen Cemetery
401 SE 21st Ave
Gainesville, FL 32641