Fairview Cemetery is located off of Pontiac Trail on the north side of Ann Arbor.
https://www.a2gov.org/departments/city-clerk/Fairview-Cemetery/Pages/default.aspx
As of 2024, Fairview Cemetery still has over 100 lots with burial rights available for purchase.
https://www.a2gov.org/departments/city-clerk/Fairview-Cemetery/Pages/Prices.aspx
History
The earliest graves are from the 1830s.
Gravesites
Charles Kellogg, (October 3, 1773-May 11, 1842).
More information
- http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM5CJW
- Fairview Cemetery readings from Rootsweb; credited to Paulette Quartermain
- Fairview Cemetery headstones, photos on USGenWeb
In the news
- Campus Ethnography: Appreciating being alive in autumn at Fairview Cemetery, Chris Gerben for AnnArbor.com, October 24, 2010
If it weren’t for the fact that everything apart from the trees and squirrels were dead, this could be considered living history. I’ve spotted stones as old as the 1830s, and some are so weathered and cracked that you can’t even read them anymore. There are markers of names that will sound familiar to any Ann Arbor resident. There’s a civil war memorial from the 1870s recognizing the young Ann Arbor men who fought for the Union. And in the far corner of the cemetery, there is a large black headstone sticking nearly 3 feet into the air, on one side the University of Michigan seal, and the other a large block M. Around this stone there are a few dozen stones, simply etched with dates, going as far back as 1915. Here the remains of nearly a century’s worth of people who donated their bodies to science at U-M huddle as a final reminder that even the living rely on the dead to keep going.
Fairview Cemetery in Lower Town.