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Lake County Cemetery Records

Lake County Cemeteries

Eerie illustration of a figure in a graveyard at night, with gravestones and a dark, forested backdrop.

The first Leadville Cemetery and the present Lake County High School football field occupy the same general location at the western end of Chestnut Street. The Cemetery's perimeters extend past the point where the Rio Grande railroad crews laid track over a number of graves, when the line came into Leadville in 1880. That same year, residents of the neighborhood complained loudly about the aroma which emanated from the sunken graves.

"In short, there was nothing about the Leadville Cemetery to make a well man want to die.”

For more information on the original Leadville Cemetery:

Original Leadville Cemetery Listing -- 1877-1879
  • (listed in alphabetical order by last name)
"Leadville City Cemetery"
  • Written by Nancy Manly, reprinted from the "Mountain Digging," No. 15

Evergreen Cemetery

Snowy cemetery entrance with an arch reading "Evergreen Cemetery" and a sign for monuments and fences.
"The Evergreen Cemetery"
  • Written by Nancy Manly, reprinted from the Mountain Diggings, Vol. 1, No. 7.
Evergreen Cemetery Walking Tour BrochureEvergreen Listing - 1879-1981
  • Evergreen Cemetery maps, listing, and information.

Leadville Irish Miners' Memorial at Evergreen Cemetery

A sign for a future Irish Immigrant Miners' Memorial in a forested area.
The site of the Irish Immigrant Miners' Memorial - photo taken June 15, 2021 by Lake County Public Library staff.

The memorial is currently under development and recognizes the Irish immigrant community buried in unmarked, sunken graves in the Catholic Pauper section of Evergreen Cemetery. Phase one of the project is set to be completed in September 2022. To learn more about the project and see plans for what the memorial will look like, please visit the Irish Network Colorado website.

St. Joseph's Catholic Cemetery

Three crosses with sculptures, one larger in the middle, set in a wooded area.

St. Joseph’s Catholic Cemetery was opened for use in June of 1888, at which time many people were moved from the Catholic section of the Evergreen Cemetery to the new Catholic Cemetery. The Mount Holy Cross Cemetery, immediately adjacent to St. Joseph’s, began accepting interments in 1919. A few moves from St. Joseph’s to Holy Cross occurred over the following years.

St._Joseph_s_Catholic_Cemetery_with_Twin_Lakes_and_Granite.pdf
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