Lake View Cemetery (Seattle)

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Template:Short description Template:More citations needed Template:Use mdy dates Template:Use American English Template:Infobox cemetery Lake View Cemetery is a private cemetery located in Seattle, Washington, in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, just north of Volunteer Park. Known as "Seattle's Pioneer Cemetery," it is run by an independent, non-profit association. It was founded in 1872 as the Seattle Masonic Cemetery and later renamed for its view of Lake Washington to the east.

Interments

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Graves of Bruce and Brandon Lee

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> and is found in several Seattle travel guidebooks.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 2013, forty years after his death, on Bruce Lee's birthday, flowers were piled as high as the headstones.<ref name="Richard2013" /> Lake View Cemetery did not allow Kurt Cobain to be buried there because of the already-large numbers of visitors to the Lees' graves.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Monuments

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United Confederate Veterans Memorial

Lake View includes the Nisei War Memorial Monument, a 21-foot column erected in 1949, listing the names of 47 Japanese American soldiers from Seattle who were killed during World War II.Template:Sfn<ref name=Tsuboi>Template:Citation</ref> The Nisei Veterans Committee, in response to the US Army's plans in late 1947 to return Washington's Nisei war dead, began a door-to-door fundraising campaign in the Puget Sound region, collecting donations of $1 to $5, and raising over $10,000 to construct the memorial.<ref name=Tsuboi/> Later, 9 more names of Seattle area service members of Japanese ancestry killed in Korea, Vietnam and Granada were added to names on the memorial.<ref name=Tsuboi/>

The cemetery has a memorial to Confederate veterans erected in 1926 by Seattle's chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, near the site of 11 graves, the only burial ground in the Northwest of Confederate soldiers.<ref name=Clarridge2017>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> During the 2020 George Floyd protests, the memorial was toppled by unknown persons on July 3, 2020. It had been criticized by protestors, and targeted with vandalism and graffiti in recent years.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

See also

References

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Sources

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