Inscription
The cemetery has been the final resting place of area residents since the 1820s. Settlers from New York and New England migrated here in the 1810s and 1820s. First called “Greenbrier,” the area took the name Parma after the township was organized in 1826. A log building at the cemetery’s north end stood from 1826 to 1841 and served as a township school, public meeting place, and church. The cemetery’s small sandstone vault was erected in 1892. After voters established Parma Heights village in 1911, the Parma Heights Cemetery Improvement Association formed to care for the grounds. (Continued on other side)
[Side B]: (Continued from other side) To accommodate generations of burials, the cemetery’s acreage was expanded in 1913, 1925-’27, and 1972. Laborers from the New Deal’s Works Progress Administration (W.P.A.) built the cemetery’s wall and sandstone steps around 1936. The City of Parma Heights has maintained the cemetery since 1955. The graves of local veterans are marked with small metal plaques. Decoration Day and then Memorial Day services have been held here since 1868.
Location
Sources
More markers in Cuyahoga
Clark Avenue Public Baths
Cleveland, OH
In the early 20th century, the City of Cleveland began opening public bath houses as a way to address the unsanitary living conditions of...
(B) Cahoon Memorial Park
Bay Village, OH
Joseph Cahoon brought his family from Vergennes, Vermont, to Dover Township in 1810, and they established themselves as the first...
Hough Uprising July 18-24, 1966
Cleveland, OH
Civil unrest rocked the Hough neighborhood for five nights during the summer of 1966.
The Arcade
Cleveland, OH
A Historic Landmark in Architecture Built 1890.
Bay Village Chapter, League of Women Voters / Honoring Bay Village Chapter, 75th Anniversary
Bay Village, OH
The Bay Village Chapter of the League of Women Voters was established in Spring 1948, with Dorothy M. Austin as president.
