United States Department of Veterans Affairs
United States Department of Veterans Affairs

Burial & Memorials

Cemeteries - Albany Rural Cemetery Soldiers' Lot

 

Albany Rural Cemetery Soldiers' Lots
Albany Rural Cemetery
Cemetery Avenue
Albany, NY 12204

Office Hours:
See General Information

Visitation Hours:
Open daily from sunrise to sunset.

Overall view of Albany Cemetery Soldiers’ Lot showing headstones, flagpole with flag and the GAR monument.


Burial Space: This soldiers’ lot is closed to interments.

Acreage: 0.16

Floral/Ground Regulations


Directions from nearest airport:
Take New York Thruway to Exit 23. Take 787 North for approximately 3-4 miles to 378 West (Watervliet). Take first exit off 378 (Route 32). Turn right on Route 32. The cemetery entrance is on the left.  The Soldiers’ Lot is located in Lot 7, Section 75.



GENERAL INFORMATION

The private and community cemeteries that contain NCA soldiers’ and government lots, and Confederate cemeteries, do not always have staffed offices on site. When administrative information for the larger cemetery is available, it is provided below. 

Albany Rural Cemetery
Phone: (518) 463-7017
Fax:  (518) 463-0787
Website:  http://www.albanyruralcemetery.org

This soldiers’ lot is overseen by the Gerald B.H. Solomon Saratoga National Cemetery.

Please contact the national cemetery for more information.

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HISTORICAL INFORMATION

Albany Rural Cemetery is located in the city of Albany, New York, on an elevated plateau overlooking the Hudson River. The cemetery was established as a result of a public reaction to overcrowded and deteriorating church burial grounds in the state’s capital. The citizens sought a “rural cemetery” outside the city proper, which was incorporated on April 2, 1841. Albany Rural, true to its name, opened Oct. 7, 1844, and it remains one of the oldest examples of this style of picturesque cemeteries in the country. The cemetery, now 467 acres, is the last resting place for the 21st U.S. president, Chester Arthur, along with legions of national and state politicians. 

The Albany Rural Soldiers’ Lot is located in Lot 7, Section 75. Although no deed was located, the 0.16-acre lot was donated to the federal government by the Albany Cemetery Association on June 17, 1862, for the “burial of soldiers who have fallen or may fall in the Civil War.” The majority of burials consist of soldiers who died of injury or illness in hospitals around Albany during the Civil War. The last of the 149 interments was made in 1897. 

Albany Rural Cemetery, including the National Cemetery Administration’s soldiers’ lot, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in October 1979.


Monuments and Memorials
About 1873, the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR) erected a monument to remember local men who lost their lives during the Civil War. The 15-foot-tall GAR Monument is composed of a bronze figure of a Civil War soldier atop a granite shaft, adorned on each side with bronze inscription plaques listing the names of those who died during the Civil War. On the front of the shaft there is an oval bas-relief portrait of Abraham Lincoln, signed “Pickett 1873.”
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NOTABLE PERSONS


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FLORAL/GROUNDS REGULATIONS

Rules and regulations play an important part in the beautification and preservation of the resting places. They are intended not as restraining, but rather as defining an orderly plan of operation, care and permanent maintenance.

The cemetery reserves the right to remove all flowers, wreaths and other decorations from lots as soon as they become unsightly.

Also the cemetery reserves the right to restrict the planting of shrubs and trees and to remove any shrubs or tree. 

All flowers and decorations will be removed from lots for spring cleanup. Cleanup starts March 15 and lasts approximately two weeks. (Signs will be posted at each entrance).

Glass or ceramic containers, vigil lights and candles are not permitted at any time.
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