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Waukesha County
(Town of Lisbon)
St James - Rose Hill Cemetery
Tombstone Photos


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.


Adami, Albert H.
Adami, Alvin H.
Adami, Cora M.
Adami, Doris L.
Adami, Erwin L. and Mildred D.
Adami, Frances
Adamson, Edward
Adamson, Robert E.
Adamson, Ruth
Ahlhaus, George and Helen
Allen, Florence M.
Allen, William M.
Altwies, Joyce L. Siewert
Andree, otto W. and Claribel
Andrysczyk, John and Dolores
App, George B.
Badinger, David C. and Bernice H.
Baranowski, Catherine
Baranowski, Gustave
Barnes, Dennis L. and family
Bartline, James L.
Bartline, Marlin and Hazel
Bauer, Carl
Beck, Ida M.
Beckman, Clyde M.
Bequest, Thomas W. and Cynthia M.
Bohdalik, Stephanie C.
Botsford, Christopher and Ruben S.
Bowes, Jane M.
Bowes, Wm.
Braeger, Arthur
Braeger, Gerhardt (Gerry) and Carol J.
Braeger, Paul August and Alma Bectker
Brown, Charles H. and Mary
Brown, Edward and Emily Robbins
Brown, Everett
Brown, Frank W. and Pearl H.
Brown, John
Brown, Thomas A.
Bruschaber, Minnie
Bruschaber, Otto A.
Bulman, Patrick
Butler, Joseph and Jennie
Caine, Henrietta Gould
Caine, Irena Jane
Caine, Thomas and Hannah Lee
Calmes, Richard P. and family
Cappelletti, John and Mary
Carlson, Helen M.
Carlson, Henry G. and Jeanne A.
Carlson, John Ivan
Chambers, Margaret
Chase, Dale D. and Flora K.
Christman, Henry Morris
Cook, Carrie
Cook, Earl
Cook, Elizabeth
Cook, Emanuel
Cook, Esther
Cook, Fred S.
Cook, George E.L.
Cook, Hellen Souter
Cook, Irving H. and Sarah R.
Cook, John and Mary Ann
Cook, Joseph Sr.
Cook, Joseph
Cook, Mary E.
Cook, Maryette
Cook, Robert W.
Cook, Sarah Ann
Cook, Thomas P. and Albertina A.
Cook, Thomas
Cook, unclear
Cordett, Kate Mannering
Corlett, Ellison C. and James T.
Cournoyer, Russell and Roseann
Crogan, Eugene F.
D'Orazio, Amedeo and Mary
Dale, Hannah and Joseph
Dale, John and Mary Cook
Davidson, Thomas W. and Phoebe M.
DeQuardo, Sam and Marie
DeSelms, Leela G.
Dewar, John E.
Dickman, John E. and Jean
Dlobik, Lynn
Doperalski, Stephen M. (Steve) and Edna R. Augustine
Dubinicka, Valentine E. and Betty C.
Dubnicka, Joseph A. and Jean C.
Durica, Margaret D.
Durica, Marsha Ann
Durnford, Florenz
Durnford, Frederick A.
Durnford, Harold S. and Florence M.
Durnford, Pauline E.
Durnford, Ross
Edwards, Isaac and Sarah A.
Ehlers, Martha Siewert
Ellsworth, Ethel A.
Fallos, William Jr.
Farrell, Mabel Craven
Fourness, Montague D. and Diane P.
Frommung, Eliza Riesing
Gansemer, LaVerne R. (Gus) and Catherine A. (Kay)
Gerken, Annie E.
Gerken, David E. and family
Gerken, David E.
Gerken, James H.
Gerken, Margaretha
Gerken, Merlin C. and Wilma M. Hornig
Gerken, Ross L.
Gleisner, William C. and Gertrude M.
Gnabasik, Chester and Patricia
Gobis, Elvin P. and Barbara
Godin, Florence A.
Gosnell, Vernon W.
Graves, Rachel
Graves, William
Greengo, William A. and Frances S.
Grogan, Ada R.
Grogan, Earl F.
Grogan, Frank T.
Gross, Robert H.
Grover, Albert F.
Grover, Alden J.
Grover, Almeda E.
Grover, Alpha and Betsey A.
Grover, Alvin L.
Grover, Edith May
Grover, Grace E.
Grover, Hiram B.
Grover, Martha J.
Grover, Mary E.
Grover, Morgie L.
Haasch, Alfred W.
Haasch, Otto
Haasch, Pauline
Haasch, William J.H.
Haley, William M. and Christine M.
Hall, Charles G. and family
Hardiman, Henry R. and Cora D.
Hardiman, Milo W. and family
Harland, Alice
Harland, Edward E.
Harland, Esther
Harland, John S.
Harland, Lillie
Harland, Mary J.
Harland, Sarah
Harland, William A. and Charlotte L.V.
Harland, William
Harris, Ellen I.
Harris, Eunice M.
Harris, Franklin
Harris, Gordon T. and Jane M.
Harris, Peter
Harris, unclear
Harris, Walter J.
Hartling, Lillie A.
Hartling, Phillipp J.
Hartling, Sylvester P. and Edna M.
Hawes, Fred C.
Hawes, Irene
Hawes, Sophia
Hawes, William F.
Haycraft, William
Headley, David and family
Hecker, Eugene R. and Lillian W.
Hecker, Henry F.
Hecker, Ida L.
Hecker, infant female
Hodgson, Alvina and family
Holz, Geneva C. Weber
Howitt, Martha R. and Mattie
Howitt, Thomas
Jacobi, Gary A. and Susan A.
Kagel, Jerome R. and Judith E.
Kagel, William E. and family
Kaye, Ella
Kerr, Charles B. and Sylvia E.
Kerstein, A. Rudy
Kerstein, Mary E.
Ketchum, Samuel W.
Ketchum, Sylvester
Klinkert, Michael and Kay
Klisch, Robert P.
Knezinek, Charles
Knoerr, Donald and Delores
Koeske, Dolores E.
Koloske, Edward D. and Jane M.
Kosmalski, Steven and Walls and Sophie
Kreuser, Hazel M.
Kurz, William and Helen
LaFrance, Francis E.
Lamb, William and John
Lauer, Lawrence J. and Elaine R.
Leadley, Edith
Leadley, John Roswell
Leadley, mother stone
Leadley, Thomas and Edith E.
Leadley, Wm.
Lees, Albert J.
Lees, Allen
Lees, Clarence J. and Dora J.
Lees, Helen C.
Lees, Louisa M.
Lees, Mable B.
Lees, Thomas and unclear
Lees, Thomas Edgar
Leinstock, Stefan and Anna
Lenhardt, Tobias and Frieda
Lessl, Dominic
Lessl, Ruth A.
Leu, Donald F. and Mary Ann
Liedtke, Elizabeth
Liedtke, Minnie
Liedtke, William
Limbury, Colette M.
Lindquist, Charles F.
Lindquist, Charlotte M.
Lindquist, Emma M.
Lindquist, Lucy M.
Lingelbach, Chester Roy and Ethel Rhea
Lingelbach, Ermina M.
Lingelbach, John C.
Lingelbach, Meta A.
Liska, Anita
Little, Penelope A. Riesing
Luckason, Alger C.
Luckason, Dorothy I.
Magnusson, John and Hulda
Mahar, John L. and Delores M.
Mannering, Alice
Marlow, Raymond L.
Marlow, Shirley A.
Marx, Erwin and Alice
Marzo, Frank and Helen J.
McGill, William J. (Bill) and Shirley A.
Meace, Elizabeth M.
Meyer, William E. and Lillian M.
Michels, Ruth A.
Minor, Earl D. and Dorothy M.
Moody, Glen F. Sr. and Keryl J.
Moore, Rosamond Craven
Motz, Eleanore C.
Motz, Esther E.
Motz, John and Caroline
Motz, Rev. Irvin S.
Mulhern, Joseph C.
Munz, Herman C. and Alma L.
Munz, Victor R.
Nitschke, Emily Rose
Normington, George and unclear
Nugent, Jane
Orth, Joseph M.
Otterburn, Clarissa M.
Pankratz, William L. and Shirley R.
Parker, Joseph
Parsons, James A. and George H.
Parsons, James
Patnode, Donald J. and Clara Mae
Patterson, Carmela Myers
Pentony, Francis B. Jr. and Shirley A.
Pentony, Gary A. and Gina L.
Peters, Norman R. and Bernadette
Petterson, Ivan B.
Powers, Roger L.
Price, Thomas
Pucek, John and Beverly M.
Puerzer, Conrad A. and family
Puffer, Edmund W.
Puffer, Mary Gerken
Raasch, George
Raether, Virginia M. Vavra
Reay, Presley N. and Nancy A.
Redford, Adeline
Redford, Esther H.
Redford, George and unclear
Redford, George H.
Redford, Henry
Redford, Mary
Redford, Sarah D.
Redford, Sylvester C.
Redford, Sylvester T.
Redford, T.S. and Jane
Richards, E
Ridley, Albert
Ridley, George W. and Elizabeth
Ridley, Mary J.
Riesing, Calvin H. and Evelyn P.
Riesing, Earl T. and Helen G.
Riesing, Edw. C.
Riesing, Herbert W. and Charlotte A.
Riesing, Larry
Riesing, Ralph R. and Alfreda V.
Robinson, William J. and Mary
Rodgers, James
Ropiak, Ronald C. and Donna J.
Rosenquist, Martin and Selma
Rosier, Walter and Ida Ann
Rotsford, C.L.
Rotsford, Nettie L. Ostrander
Russell, Margaretha C. Luce
Salentine, Roy J. and Margaret M.
Sampson, Frederick W. and family
Schaat, Elisabeth
Schallock, William and Alice
Schlehlein, William J. and Diane M.
Schmid, Sandra M.
Schmidt, Esther E.
Schmith, Olive M.
Schneider, Henry F. and Edna H.
Schwartz, John
Siewert, Hugo E.
Siewert, Sonya Jean
Siewert, Theodore R. and family
Skinner, Thomas H. and family
Skinner, Wallace W.
Slominski, Dorothy
Smith, Ann
Smith, Edward
Smith, Harrison and Sophronia
Smith, Jane
Smith, John Herman Jeanette
Smith, John
Smith, Joseph E.
Smith, Lema
Smith, Rick O. and Rosemary
Smith, Samuel
Smith, Thomas
Smith, unclear female
Smithyman, Milton H.
Smithyman, Ralph P. and Lorraine E.
Smithyman, W. and Iva
Souter, Charles
Souter, David
Souter, James
Souter, Jane Smith
Souter, Lavantia
Souter, Nellie
Speigle, Ralph L. and Alma A.
Spencer, Howard and May
St. James Rose Hill Cemetery Sign,  
Stephenson, John C.
Stern, Andrew
Stihl, Joseph and Mary
Stone, Albert S.
Stone, herbert and Margaret
Stone, Homer L.
Stone, infant male
Stone, John W. and Freda H.
Stone, Warren and Bernice
Stone, William N. and Grace M.
Stout, Carrie E.
Swanson, Axel W. and Astrid K.
Swartz, Laurie
Tomasik, James A. and Lucille M.
Treloar, Jane
Van de Broek, Johannes (Hans) and Donna Mae
Van Lare, Gerald F.
Vanderby, Arnold and Bertha
Varley, Alice
Vogt, Herbert W. and family
Wallen, Frank O.
Walsh, Elisabeth M.
Walsh, Virginia C.
Walter, Wm.
Warden, Lana Sue
Weaver, Allison
Weaver, Jane
Weaver, Stephen M.
Weaver, William B.
Weaver, William
Weber, Joseph C. and Hilda B.
Weber, Joseph C. Jr.
Wendt, Arthur
Wendt, Cora
Wendt, Idabelle M.
Wendt, Raymond A.
Westfall, Marvin A. and Betty A. Pucek
Westphal, Kenneth J. and Margaret L.
Wileden, Alfred
Wileden, Angelia
Wileden, Ann
Wileden, George E. and Ruth E.
Wileden, Horace and Nellie
Wileden, Mima J.
Wileden, Myrtle N.
Wilkins, unclear female
Wilson, Rev. George
Wright, Mary J. and Mabel E.
Youngen, Dorothy
Zielinski, Joseph T. and Rose C.
Zimdars, Fred William
Zimmerman, Dean Alan
Zimmerman, Jay Alan
Zoschke, Alfred Jr.

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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