Revolutionary War Cemetery Records: Difference between revisions

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Cemetery records can aid in locating information about a Revolutionary War ancestor.  Societies such as the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Sons of the American Revolution have compiled lists and indexes of known Revolutionary War soldiers. State organizattions and local histories often make note of Revolutionary War veterans buried in their locality  
Cemetery records can aid in locating information about a Revolutionary War ancestor. Societies such as the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Sons of the American Revolution have compiled lists and indexes of known Revolutionary War soldiers. State organizattions and local histories often make note of Revolutionary War veterans buried in their locality  


The [[Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) Library|Daughters of the American Revolution]] has published the grave locations of Revolutionary War soldiers in the following source:  
The [[Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) Library|Daughters of the American Revolution]] has published the grave locations of Revolutionary War soldiers in the following source:  

Latest revision as of 10:46, 5 January 2024


Cemetery records can aid in locating information about a Revolutionary War ancestor. Societies such as the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Sons of the American Revolution have compiled lists and indexes of known Revolutionary War soldiers. State organizattions and local histories often make note of Revolutionary War veterans buried in their locality

The Daughters of the American Revolution has published the grave locations of Revolutionary War soldiers in the following source:

  • DAR Annual Report to the Smithsonian Institution, 1900–1974. These lists have been continued in the DAR Magazine. (FS Library book 973 B2dar) beginning with the October 1969 issue. The lists give name, birth date, death date, burial place, rank, and state and regiment of service if known. There are more than 58,500 identified graves.

The lists published in the DAR Magazine between 1974 and 1982 were reprinted as the following:

The following source indexes the DAR Annual Reports to the Smithsonian Institution for 1900 and 1915 through 1986:

  • Hatcher, Patricia Law. Abstract of Graves of Revolutionary Patriots. Four Volumes. Dallas, Texas: Pioneer Heritage Press, 1987–88. (FS Library book 973 V38h.) Alphabetical entries listing the name, cemetery, place the cemetery is located, and reporting year. Online at: Ancestry ($).

A card file of located graves is maintained at the DAR Library in the Office of the Historian General. A similar card file abstracting burial and service information from the DAR reports is in the Harold B. Lee Library at Brigham Young University and at the FamilySearch Library. It is called:

  • DAR Revolutionary War Burial Index. Salt Lake City, Utah: The Genealogical Society of Utah, 1993. (FS Library films 1307675–83.) Microfilm of original cards compiled at Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. Includes name; birth date; death date; burial place, including state, county, and town, and name of cemetery; service, and so on.

Also available from the Sons of the American Revolution are:

  • War Graves Registration Forms. Salt Lake City, Utah: The Genealogical Society of Utah, 1996. (On eight FS Library films beginning with 2032073.) These records are alphabetically arranged, and contain forms received by the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution up to mid-1993.

Listed below are additional sources of information on Revolutionary War deaths:

Many states, associations, and individuals have compiled cemetery listings of Revolutionary War soldiers and veterans. The FamilySearch Library has the following lists available:

Alabama Georgia Indiana
Illinois Iowa Maine
Massachusetts Missouri New York
Ohio Texas Vermont
Wisconsin