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Fort Logan National Cemetery is a National Cemetery in Denver, Colorado. Fort Logan was named after Union General John A. Logan, commander of US Volunteer forces during the American Civil War. It contains 214 acres (87 ha) and has over 122,000 interments as of 2014.
Fort Logan itself was established on October 31, 1887, and was in continuous use until 1960 when most of the acreage except for the cemetery was turned over to the state of Colorado. The national cemetery was created in 1950.
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Bond Brye
Jaymes Brye
Wilson Brye
Graves in a newer section
Fort Logan National Cemetery, April 5, 2012
Flags placed on graves, Memorial Day 2006
Graves in the older section
Grave of Karl F. Baatz, a German World War II POW
United States Department of Agriculture, United States Department of the Interior, Washington, D.C., Bureau of Land Management, National Park Service
Confederate States of America, Abraham Lincoln, Ulysses S. Grant, United States, Republican Party (United States)
Nevada, United States Department of the Interior, Alaska, Arizona, California
Republican Party (United States), Democratic Party (United States), Denver, United States, Boulder, Colorado
Jstor, National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior, Historic preservation, Pdf
United States Army, Medal of Honor, South Vietnam, Vietnam War, Lodi, California
United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Arlington National Cemetery, Tennessee, Washington, D.C., Memphis, Tennessee
Church of the Brethren (Hygiene, Colorado), Fairmount Cemetery (Denver, Colorado), Fairmount Mausoleum (Denver, Colorado), Fort Logan National Cemetery, Fort Lyon National Cemetery