845 Sappington Rd, St. Louis, MO 63126, United StatesKarte
Telefon: +1 314-822-8221
Was andere Besucher sagten
Mehr
Empfehlungen in der Nähe von Father Dickson Cemetery
Rezension von Father Dickson Cemetery
Trip.com
(2 Bewertungen)TripAdvisor
2 Bewertungen
T1844IVannm
History!!!
I walked thru the Cemetery some of the forgotten stone have sunken in. The place has history if you read the headstone. It's a huge area so make sure you have your walking shoes on . The first place ...
Bewertet am 13. März 2018
T1844IVannm
History!!!
I walked thru the Cemetery some of the forgotten stone have sunken in. The place has history if you read the headstone. It's a huge area so make sure you have your walking shoes on . The first place ...
Bewertet am 13. März 2018
Mary B
Beautiful historic cemetery
Father Dickson Cemetery was one of the first public cemeteries available to Black people in the St. Louis area, and was the site of 12,000 burials before it closed in the 1970's. Without a perpetual c...
Bewertet am 8. Nov. 2017
Mary B
Beautiful historic cemetery
Father Dickson Cemetery was one of the first public cemeteries available to Black people in the St. Louis area, and was the site of 12,000 burials before it closed in the 1970's. Without a perpetual c...
History!!!
I walked thru the Cemetery some of the forgotten stone have sunken in. The place has history if you read the headstone. It's a huge area so make sure you have your walking shoes on . The first place ...
History!!!
I walked thru the Cemetery some of the forgotten stone have sunken in. The place has history if you read the headstone. It's a huge area so make sure you have your walking shoes on . The first place ...
Beautiful historic cemetery
Father Dickson Cemetery was one of the first public cemeteries available to Black people in the St. Louis area, and was the site of 12,000 burials before it closed in the 1970's. Without a perpetual c...
Beautiful historic cemetery
Father Dickson Cemetery was one of the first public cemeteries available to Black people in the St. Louis area, and was the site of 12,000 burials before it closed in the 1970's. Without a perpetual c...