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Racine County
(Racine)
Mound Cemetery
Tombstone Photos

Abend - Griffiths


These photos were generously taken and contributed to these pages by Larry & Linda Kopet!   Please take a moment to thank them for this terrific resource!  Use your back browser button to return to this page. Please note that these generous contributions do not necessarily depict all tombstone photographs for a given cemetery.


Abend, Corp. Walter F.
Aber, Earle J. and family
Aber, Ernie
Adams, Edward B.
Agnew, Earl G. and Louisa
Akin, Freeman H. and Mary M.
Albashian, Hachadoor
Allen, Gary lee
Alverson, Wm.
American Revolution Memorial Sign #1
American Revolution Memorial Sign #2
Anclam, Otto G. and Eva M.
Angney, unclear
Anheuser, Mathilde Wieber
Antal, Judith
Apostol, Eleanor
Armstrong, Benjamin F.
Armstrong, Grace Mosher
Arvidson, Rose Constance
Ashley, Thomas D.
Atteberry, Arloa
Atteberry, Dorothy
Austin, Claude Eldredge
Austin, Donald and Harry S.
Austin, Leander
Axford, William E.
Baas, Johannes and Maria
Bacon, William H.
Baggesen, Clarence H.
Bailey, Edmund and Ida Peck
Baker, Robert H. (stone # 2)
Baker, Robert H.
Balke, Arnold G.
Balke, Marcella L.
Ballewski, Wilhelmiene
Banadinovic, Ellen S. Pearson
Barker, Norma J.
Bartz, Norman H.
Bartz, Robert C.
Barwich, Karl
Basye, Jane
Basye, unclear
Bean, Henry R.
Bean, Jane
Beanston, David and Alfred
Beanston, Peter Sr.
Beaugrand, James R.
Beck, Anna E.
Beck, John E.
Beland, Anna
Beland, Joseph
Bell, Robert and Hannah and Dora Gilmore
Beltz, Hattie R.
Beltz, Mathilda
Bengtsen, Christina
Bengtson, Axel L.
Bengtson, Elizabeth
Bengtson, Mary
Berch, Jesse L. and Marian Basye
Berg, Augusta
Berg, Martin
Besler, Elizabeth Weissert
Bettridge, Abraham and Eliza
Beyer, Albert
Beyer, Ethel L.
Bezucha, Anna
Bezucha, Anton
Billings, Julia L.
Billings, W.F.
Birkett, Edward J. and Sarah J.
Bissett, James Galt
Bissett, Martha Louise Lugg
Black, Jane Ann
Blish, Irwin E.
Blocksidge, James Jenking
Bobeck, Isaac Jr.
Bobroff, Bornett L.
Boghosian, Kaloust
Bone, Margaret
Bones, Capt. Wm.
Bones, Courtland and Amelia A.
Bones, unclear female
Borchardt, Charles
Borchardt, Max
Borg, Jane Tapling
Borowski, Anna E.
Borowski, Bernard A.
Borowski, Johnie
Boutell, Mildred
Bouton, James S. and Emeline
Bouwens, Norma
Boyd, Frances M.
Bradley, Chloe
Bradley, Lucas and Lucinda
Bradley, Sarah A. and Lucy
Braithwaiter, Anna C. Kipp
Braithwaiter, Henry J. and Emma L.
Braithwaiter, Philip J.
Brandow, Fred
Brandow, Grace
Brandow, Lucy
Brannum, James Elliott
Brannum, Julia A.
Brearley, Louise Schneider
Breckenfeld, Charles A.
Breckenfeld, Margaret A.
Brehaut, Stanley
Breitung, Sylvester L.
Brietzke, Charles H. and June Oneson
Brill, Ernst H. and family
Briske, George H.
Briske, Julia L.
Bristol, Annie L.
Broberg, Wilhelm and Christine
Brodersen, John
Bronnum, Gregor Selius
Brown, Anne Helene
Brown, Edward
Brown, Eliza M.
Brown, Enoch
Brown, Jack Coleman
Brown, Lephia O.
Brown, Sarah
Browne, Kenneth Fay
Browne, Martha W.
Bruce, F.W. and Anna M.
Brutherton, O. Perry
Brux, Dorothea and Luella
Bucher, Eleanor
Bucher, Emil G.
Bucher, George
Buchta, David E. Jr.
Buell, John B.
Buenning, Herman
Buettel, John
Buettel, Katherine
Bugnham, Hannah C.
Bull, George W.
Bull, Stephen and Ellen C.
Bullock, Robert L.
Bunce, Charles L. and Susan C.
Burkert, Caroline
Buttels, Augusta
Butterfield, Moses Bradford and Mellona D. Moulton
Butterfield, William T. and Hannah M.
Butzine, Walter A.
Cahoon, Edward E.
Cahoon, Sara Rowland
Callender, Donald Eugene and Henrietta Schulz
Canfield, Helen M.
Canfield, Henry B. and male infant
Canfield, Miriam H.
Canfield, Rosweir
Carey, Frank A.
Carlson, unclear male
Carver, Rufus
Caven, John C. and nancy
Caven, Nancy
Cerny, John
Cerny, Marie
Chaffee, Carrie
Cheves, Annie E.
Cheves, P.C.
Chrissen, Holver
Christensen, Anna Trine
Christie, Dorothy Ann
Christmas, Eldon LeRoy
Claney, Nellie Wood
Clarke, Lydia Wright and Alice
Clarke, Norman
Clemons, Grace Trist
Clemons, Ward C.
Clinton, Abbie J.
Clinton, Fannie I.
Cluch, Andrew
Clunie, Charlotte
Clunie, Math. and Christine
Clunie, Milton O. and Geraldine M.
Coe, Horatio B.
Coldie, Annie McRitchie
Cole, Richard and Sarah
Cole, William and family
Collins, C. and Mary A.
Collins, Edith M.
Collins, H.G. and L.R.
Condon, Jennie
Cooke, Paul C. and family
Cooley, Walter and family
Cooley, William and Eliza A.
Cooper, Charlotte E.
Cooper, George
Corse, James
Corse, Mary S.
Cowlishaw, Katie Roberts
Crase, John H.
Creuziger, Ellis E.
Crotsenburg, Emanuel
Cunningham, Frank
Curran, Geo. H.
Curtis, Julia E.
Cutting, Herbert P.
Cutting, Sergt. A.
Dacouisto, unclear female
Dahlenburg, Charles E.
Dale, male infant
Davis, Marguerite
Davis, Morris O.
Dayworth, Anna Elizabeth
De Bates, Henry and Caroline
De Grave, Raymond L.
De Mouilpied, Nicholas
De Moulpied, John A. and Alice M.
Dean, Henry Jennings
Dean, Mary L. Kidder
Dean, Wilbur Henry
DeCoudres, Francis A.
DeCoudres, Sarah R.
DeGroat, Catharine
DeGroat, Emily Sarles
DeGroat, John
Dembosky, Anna B.
Dembosky, John A.
Denzin, Charles C.
Denzin, Hanna L.
DeRyke, Ann
DeRyke, Peter
DeSmidt family stone
DeSmidt, Elizabeth
DeSmidt, J.
DeSmidt, Jennie V.
DeSmidt, Sylvester J.
Deutsch, Matthew
Deutsch, Ottilie Comoll
Dietzel, Kurt and Nathalia
Dimitrijevic, Radovan and Helga
Disbrow, Alice Lucretia
Disbrow, Frank F.
Dowse, Sarah
Drago, Roy B.
Drake, Carrie M.
Drakos, Louise Palica
Due, James
Due, Kirsten M.
Duncan, Dr. Frances
Dunham, Mathew L.
Dunse, Emil August
Dunse, Friedrick
Durgin, J. Ellsworth
Durgin, Trueworthy O.D.
Dutton, Walter B.
Duwe, Emma
Dyer, Joseph
Dyer, Lucie B.
Dykstra, Clara
Dykstra, Reinder
Easson, Ada M.
Easson, Alice Elizabeth
Easson, Edith Abigail
Eddy, Edwin A. and Anne Parker
Eddy, George and Amelia C.
Edwards, Mary Ann and Martha Jane
Egmose, Peter M. and Jutla A.
Ehrlich, William F.
Eichler, Alfred Edward
Eifler, Adam F.
Elbe, Arthur O.
Elderkin, Edward and Mary M.
Ellis, Elizabeth Pugh
Elsner, William G. and Margaret L.
Emerson, children (3)
Emerson, Thomas and Ellen Woodman
Engel, Ralph
Engelbreth, Valborg and family
English, Josephine M.
Eppler, Margaret
Erb, Allen C. and Mary Ann
Erb, Charles E.
Erb, Elmer E.
Erb, Gertrude
Erickson, Frederick
Ernst, Paul W.
Evans, Ellen
Evans, Gwen
Evans, Thomas J. and Griffith R.
Evans, Thos. J.
Evans, Walter J. Sr.
Fairbanks, Frances Secor
Fairbanks, Herbert A.
Falkenberg, Herman
Falkenberg, Marie
Falkenrath, Carl and Emilie
Faragher, Cora M.
Faragher, John G.
Fathers, Eunice
Feiker, Gus A.
Fellows, Adolphus
Fellows, Geo. D.
Fellows, Louisa Olds
Fiebrich, Edward P.
Fiebrich, Lucy
Fink, Albert
Fink, Annie Peat
Finn, Harold J.
Foster, Alice G.
Foster, Alva C.
Foster, Corrie S. and unclear female
Foster, Henry J.
Foster, Roy J.
Frank, A. Sophy
Frank, Christian Wm.
Frank, James
Frank, Mary Frances
Fregien, Christian and Justine
Freudenthal, Dorothy
Freudenthal, John Jacob
Friend, infant
Fritz, Emil J. and Blanche G.
Fuller, Sarah Hall
Gajan, Joseph
Galbraith, John F. and Georgia A.
Gall, Arthur and Laura
Gall, Charlotte
Gallien, John
Garrett, Lewis E.
Gates, Audrey H.
Gates, George B. Sr.
Gates, Gretchen Ann
George, Thomas and Mary
Gerardo, Salvador J.
Gfoerer, Helena
Gildemeister, Greta
Gilkowske, Caroline
Gillette, Elizabeth
Gillette, Frank
Gilmor, Theodora
Glass, AnnaMae C.
Goehner, Bertha
Goehner, Christiana
Goehner, Erhard
Goergen, John F.
Goergen, Martha
Gonzales, Santos O. Sr.
Graham, Elizabeth Lockyear
Grant, male infant
Gray, Augustus R. and Mary R.
Gray, Charles H.
Gray, J.E.
Gray, Laurabell L.
Greenberg, Bess L. Morgan
Grenier, Achille and Mary Frances French
Griffith, Florence M.
Griffith, Frank W.
Griffith, Laurine C.
Griffiths, Griffith A. and Gwen

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WISCONSIN MUNICIPALITIES: Cities Towns, and Villages, often referred to as 'municipalities' in Wisconsin law, are the governmental units that relate most directly to citizens' everyday lives.

TOWNS, like counties, were created by the state to provide basic municipal services. Rooted in New England and New York tradition, town government came to Wisconsin with the settlers, but Wisconsin towns were not like their Eastern counterparts that reflected the existing patterns of local settlement. In Wisconsin, towns are geographical subdivisions of counties. Towns originally served (and for the most part they continue to serve) rural areas. Towns govern those areas of Wisconsin not included in the corporate boundaries of cities and villages.

The difference between "township" and "town" often confuses the public. In Wisconsin, "township' refers to the surveyor's township which was laid out to identify land parcels within a county. Theoretically. a township is a square tract of land, measuring six miles on a side for a total of 36 square miles in the unit. Each township is divided into 36 sections. "Town", as the word is used in Wisconsin, denotes a specific unit of government. It's boundaries may coincide with the surveyor's township or it may look quite different. A Town may include one, parts of or several townships.

CITIES and VILLAGES, often referred to as "incorportated areas", govern territory where population is more concentrated. In general, minimum population for incorporation as a village is 150 residents for an isolated village and 2,500 for a metropolitan village located in a more densely settled area. For cities, the minimums are 1,000 and 5,000 respectively. As cities and villages are incorporated, they are carved out of the town territory and become independent units no longer subject to the town's control. The remainder of the town may take on a 'Swiss cheese" configuration as its area is reduced.

[Information above taken from "State of Wisconsin Blue Book 1997-1998"]

WIGenWeb
ProjectCopyright Notice: These generous contributions do not necessarily depict all tombstone photographs for a given cemetery. The source for many of the cemetery names and placenames on these pages come from Cemetery Locations in Wisconsin, 3rd edition, compiled by Linda M. Herrick and Wendy K. Uncapher. The book is published by Origins at 4327 Milton Ave. Janesville, WI 53546. All files on this site are copyrighted by their creator and/or contributor. They may be linked to but may not be reproduced on another site without specific permission from Tina Vickery [mailto:tsvickery@gmail.com] and/or their contributor. Although public information is not in and of itself copyrightable, the format in which they are presented, the notes and comments, etc., are. It is however, quite permissable to print or save the files to a personal computer for personal use ONLY.

This page was last updated 20 November 2012