Oak Spring Cemetary

Closed
Call
Website

Advertisement

238 Oak Spring Rd
Canonsburg, PA 15317

Oak Spring Cemetery, located in Canonsburg, PA, has a rich history spanning over two hundred years, emphasizing the importance of continued maintenance and perpetual care for its grounds. The cemetery offers a variety of services, including burial lots, a chapel, and memorial options, ensuring that families can make thoughtful decisions regarding their loved ones' final resting places.

Understanding the sensitive nature of these decisions, the staff at Oak Spring Cemetery is dedicated to providing support without pressure, allowing families the time they need to choose appropriately. The cemetery also offers financing options to ease the burden on families during difficult times.

Generated from the website

Also at this address

Own this business?
See a problem?

You might also like

Unity Chapel
Cemetery management service, Cemetery association, Growers' associations

Unity Chapel

Unity Cemetery With its shady groves and panoramic views of the Laurel Mountains, Unity Cemetery provides a peaceful final resting-place for people of all denominations. A land grant dated March 1, 1774, and signed by William Penn's Grandson, John Penn, established a burial ground and meeting place for the Presbyterian Congregation at Unity. This original land purchase, near the historic Forbes Road, was approximately sixty acres, for which Robert Hanna, Joseph Irwin, William Lochry, and Samuel Sloan paid one penny sterling per acre-the equivalent of $2.40. Today the cemetery encompasses over 234 acres. Until the 1860's there was no official caretaker or sexton at Unity Cemetery. When loved ones passed away, friends and relatives would open the grave on the family plot, and those in attendence at the funeral service stayed at the gravesite until the last shovel of dirt was placed on the grave. Many of those early graves were unmarked, so it is impossible to say when the first burial took place. The first recorded burial was that of Moses Watson, a Revolutionary War soldier, who died in 1782. - John Proctor ( 1824 ), on whose land the first local Presbyterian services were held, had been a colonel in Forbes Army in 1758. He served as the first sheriff of Westmoreland County at its forming in 1773, and organized the first regiment of militia at Hannastown in 1775 under the famous Rattlesnake Flag with its warning, "Don't Tread on Me." - William Findley ( 1821 ), a captain in the Revolutionary War, was a member of the first legislature of Pennsylvania and also a member of the convention to ratify the Constitution of the United States. - Benjamin Beatty ( 1834 ), a soldier in the Revolutionary War, crossed the Delaware with George Washington on December 24-25, 1776. - Archibold Mellon ( 1835 ), camde from Castletown, Ireland, and settled in Westmoreland County. He and his wife, Elizabeth Armour, were the great grandparents of Andrew Mellon, secretary of the treasury under three presidents. - Buried here are veterans of all wars: Revolutionary War-32 ; War of 1812-6 ; Mexican War-2 ; Civil War-144 ; Spanish-American War-11 ; as well as an ever increasing number of veterans who served in the wars of the 20th century. When the Unity Congregation was dissolved in 1920, the property and church were transferred to Unity Cemetery Association, whose fifth president, Ralph Sloan, Jr., is a descendent of Samuel Sloan, one of the founders of Unity Cemetery
United StatesPennsylvaniaCanonsburgOak Spring Cemetary

Advertisement