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Simpson Street Free Press

Forest Hill Cemetery Is a Place of Rich History and Remembrance

Forest Hill Cemetery is astonishing with its decades of history. It is located in Madison, Wisconsin's west side on Speedway Road, near West High School. This cemetery was founded in January 1857 when the city of Madison purchased the land from John and Maia Wright for $10,000 in bonds.

Many esteemed people are buried at Forest Hill Cemetery. There are several notable scientists, including Harry Steenbock, who discovered Vitamin D, John Bardeen, who won Nobel Prizes for discovering superconductivity and inventing the transistor, and Edward Birge who invented the study of limnology, which UW-Madison is known for. There are also many politicians laid to rest here, including former U.S. Senator Bob LaFollette and his family, William Freeman Vilas who was Secretary of the Interior, and Levi Baker Vilas, the fourth mayor of Madison. There are also many soldiers from both sides of the Civil War buried at Forest Hill Cemetery.

Before it was a public cemetery, Native Americans used the land as high burial grounds. They also built mounds on this land in the late woodland period [650 to 1200 A.D] one being in the shape of a goose located in section 15 on the southeast side of the cemetery. The head of this mound was destroyed when the Illinois Central Railroad was built in the 1880s. Surprisingly, the rest of this mound still stands!

If you come to Forest Hill Cemetery, you might notice the bright green grass, the towering trees, the well-kept headstones, and the calm feeling you get as soon as you step on the property. Today you can find that Forest Hill Cemetery continues to be a rich source of history and a place of remembrance.

[Sources: Wisconsin Historical Society; City of Madison; Historic Madison; William Cronon; The Veteran Museums 26th Annual Talking Spirits Cemetery Tour; Photo Credit: Dakota L. Kosharek]

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