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Lincoln Cemetery

Lincoln Cemetery

SOAL: Saving Our Ancestors' Legacy at one of Pennsylvania's Oldest Historically Black Cemeteries

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  • Join Action 4 Heritage 2025 to protect our historical memory. Unite to preserve marginalized voices and fight against renewed threats to our collective heritage
    SOAL’s Action 4 Heritage 2025
  • Rachael Keri Williams leads an interactive discussion on Death, Tech, & Afrofuturism; a look at Harrisburg's Black Civil War history during YPOC's Juneteenth Harrisburg symposium.
    Death, Tech, & Afrofuturism: Juneteenth Harrisburg
  • Developed by SOAL and Breadcrumb Analytics, MapGed.com is an online platform for community-based public history - visualizing historic social networks of enslaved people, freedom seekers on the underground railroad, and much more will be made possible through AI innovation, machine learning, and crowdsourced cluster genealogy research done by people like you.
    MapGed.com: AI Innovation Meets Hands-On Historic Preservation
  • Some of the Civil War Veterans buried in Harrisburg Lincoln Cemetery may have seen a full-color recruiting handbill like this when they enlisted in the United States Colored Troops.
    List Update: Harrisburg’s Civil War Veterans Buried at Lincoln Cemetery

Recent Comments

  1. Alex G on Devastating Loss and Potential Threat at Historic Black Cemetery29 February 2024

    Its amazing what SOAL accomplished this weekend with the support that poured out from the community.

  2. First Professional Black Artist is from Harrisburg on Civil War Veterans Buried at Lincoln Cemetery17 December 2023

    […] of his younger brothers, Cassius Maddigan Brown (who is buried in Lincoln Cemetery), “served in the brigade defending Harrisburg…

  3. WGAL News 8 Live at Harrisburg’s Oldest Black Cemetery - Lincoln Cemetery on SOAL Partners: Black Cemetery Historic Preservation with ArcGIS13 December 2023

    […] SOAL Partners: Black Cemetery Historic Preservation with ArcGIS […]

  4. SOAL Partners: Black Cemetery Historic Preservation with ArcGIS - Lincoln Cemetery on First in Black Boyscouting: Lewis Elmer Robinson13 December 2023

    […] PA, is not just a cemetery; it’s a testament to African American heritage, harboring the stories and legacies of…

  5. Central Pa Black Cemeteries | WITF Radio - Lincoln Cemetery on SOAL Partners: Black Cemetery Historic Preservation with ArcGIS13 December 2023

    […] SOAL Partners: Black Cemetery Historic Preservation with ArcGIS […]

#Harrisburg Oldest Black Cemetery 19th Century About SOAL African American Burial Ground African American Veterans African Burying Ground Black Cemetery Black Genealogy Black History Black People Photos Cemetery Restoration Central Pennsylvania Civil War Dauphin County Black History Digital Harrisburg Digital Humanities Education Enslaved Harrisburg Harrisburg African-American History Harrisburg Black History Harrisburg Lincoln Cemetery Harris Free Cemetery Historic Newspaper Historic Preservation Lincoln Cemetery News Newspaper Clippings Partnerships Pennsylvania Black Cemetery Rachael Keri Williams Radical History Reclamation SavingOurAncestorsLegacy Slavery SOAL SOAL Beginnings SOALwork TikTok Unburied Bodies Underground Railroad USCT Veterans Video Volunteer Volunteer Cemetery Restoration

Category Archives: Civil War

Rachael Keri Williams leads an interactive discussion on Death, Tech, & Afrofuturism; a look at Harrisburg's Black Civil War history during YPOC's Juneteenth Harrisburg symposium.

Death, Tech, & Afrofuturism: Juneteenth Harrisburg

Lincoln Cemetery

Death, Tech, & Afrofuturism: Juneteenth Harrisburg Join us for a compelling journey through time as Rachael Keri Williams, founder and Executive Director of SOAL: Saving Our Ancestors’ Legacy, delivers an inspiring talk titled “Death, Tech, & Afrofuturism” in this video from the YPOC 2024 Juneteenth Harrisburg Summit, held on June 18th at … Continue reading →

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Some of the Civil War Veterans buried in Harrisburg Lincoln Cemetery may have seen a full-color recruiting handbill like this when they enlisted in the United States Colored Troops.

List Update: Harrisburg’s Civil War Veterans Buried at Lincoln Cemetery

Lincoln Cemetery

List Update: Harrisburg’s Civil War Veterans Buried at Lincoln Cemetery An update to the list of Harrisburg’s Black Civil War Veterans buried in Lincoln Cemetery: No. 133: Henry C. Keith “Harry Keath” Private Co. B 8th USCT No. 134: Albert Chamberlain Corporal Co. F 25th USCT For the original list Harrisburg’s Civil … Continue reading →

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Headstone photo of Henry C. Keith Co. B 8th USCT a Black Civil War veteran buried at Lincoln Cemetery

Civil War Veteran: Henry C. Keith in the 8th USCT

Lincoln Cemetery

Civil War Veteran: Henry C. Keith in the 8th USCT Civil War veteran Henry C. Keith served in the 8th United States Colored Troops (Pvt. Co. B 8th USCT) which placed him at the heart of some of the Civil War’s most pivotal and harrowing moments. The 8th US Colored Infantry was … Continue reading →

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A never seen before class photo at one of the Ex-Slave Schools in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania-- Located at the Wickersham and Calder buildings during the time that this photo was taken. An earlier school was also operated by a White man out of the Wesley Union Church during the Civil War.

Ex-Slave School: Rare Photo Reveals Harrisburg Black History

Lincoln Cemetery

Ex-Slave School: Rare Photo Reveals Harrisburg Black History Stumbling upon a rare photo of a classroom at an “Ex-Slave School” in Harrisburg in the early 1900s, was an exhilarating moment in my journey as a public historian. This isn’t merely a rare historical find; it’s a profound revelation of Harrisburg Black History, … Continue reading →

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Immerse yourself in the early 19th Century Black experience in south central PA-- from the perspective of those who lived through it. Death on the Tracks & The Rise of a Railroad Hero (Black Dick Part #2) is a historically-based storytelling (a creative nonfiction & microhistory), of the life and deeds of Richard Smith. Richard was was most likely born near Gettysburg in the late-1830s to mid-1840s. Richard Smith, aka "Black Dick" grew up in a small shack, in a historically Black neighborhood called Judystown, located in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. During his lifetime "Black Dick" was considered a "feebleminded giant" who stood near 7 feet tall by the time he became a legendary figure. Today, we would consider him neurodivergent... in other words, Richard was an Autistic Savant.

Rise of a Railroad Hero: Black Dick’s Symphonies of Freedom

Lincoln Cemetery

Rise of a Railroad Hero: Black Dick’s Symphonies of Freedom Rise of a Railroad Hero: Black Dick’s Symphonies of Freedom (Black Dick Part #2) is a historically-based storytelling (a creative nonfiction & microhistory), of the life and deeds of Richard Smith. Richard was was most likely born near Gettysburg in the late-1830s … Continue reading →

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The Story of "Black Dick" is the Astonishing Legend of Richard Smith, an African American Disabled Railroad Hero who lived in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania and is buried in Lincoln Cemetery.

Black Dick: Astonishing Legend of a Disabled Railroad Hero

Lincoln Cemetery

Black Dick: Astonishing Legend of a Disabled Railroad Hero (Black Dick Part #1) Though, he was born in abject poverty, and spent all his days “without escutcheon or family tree, reared in no palace, tutored in no university, thus lived and died one of nature’s noblemen”—Who was Richard Smith? Who was this … Continue reading →

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Noah Pinkney was a former slave who became a community icon, soldier, and leader in both Carlisle and Harrisburg. He is pictured here selling pretzels on the campus of Dickinson College in the early 1900s.

Noah Pinkney: Former Slave Became Community Icon

Lincoln Cemetery

Former Slave Became Soldier, Restaurateur, Civil Rights Activist & Community Icon Noah Pinkney was a former slave who became a community icon. He left Frederick County, Maryland, most likely, during the Civil War and enlisted in the 127th United States Colored Troops, serving as a corporal in Company G. Noah Pinkney was … Continue reading →

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Civil War Veteran John Johnson, of the 42nd USCT After SOAL D/2 Treatment.

John Johnson, 42nd USCT

Lincoln Cemetery

John Johnson: Private Company D 42nd United States Colored Troops John W Johnson was born in August 1837 in Pennsylvania. He joined the 42nd United States Colored Troops, and served as a private in Co. C. during the Civil War.It was most likely after the war that he married Betty Bliss Carey, … Continue reading →

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22nd USCT Flag Representing Black Civil War Veterans at Lincoln Cemetery Harrisburg.

Civil War Veterans Buried at Lincoln Cemetery

Lincoln Cemetery

Harrisburg’s Civil War Veterans Buried at Lincoln Cemetery This list is by no means complete, but I figure if I keep waiting until it is complete, I would never be able to publish it… While compiling this, long-overdue, list of African American Civil War Veterans buried at Lincoln Cemetery, I realized that … Continue reading →

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Black Women Civil War Activists

Lincoln Cemetery

The Voice of Black Women Civil War Activists       When Jane Welcome wrote to President Lincoln on November 21, 1864 both of her sons were serving in the United States Colored Troops. She had received no word or money from her youngest son, Israel, who was serving with the 55th Mass, and had … Continue reading →

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Mary Fisher Welcome and Israel Mullin

Lincoln Cemetery

Israel Mullin was born between 1814-1820 in Pennsylvania. He married Jane’s daughter Mary Fisher Welcome, owned his own property and land, and built a family with Mary before he joined in the Civil War. He enlisted in Co A of the 43rd USCT on the 9th of March 1864 in Philadelphia. At … Continue reading →

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Thomas Morris Chester, Black Civil War Correspondent, Lawyer, Educator, Father, is buried at Harrisburg Lincoln Cemetery.

SOAL Spotlight: Thomas Morris Chester

Lincoln Cemetery

Thomas Morris Chester: Black Civil War Correspondent Thomas Morris Chester was the third child of George and Jane Chester, born in Harrisburg on May 11, 1834. He died in Harrisburg, Pa., Sept. 30, 1892, aged 58 and was buried in Harrisburg Lincoln Cemetery. Inheriting his mother’s courage, he created his legacy through … Continue reading →

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Email: soal@lincolncemetery.org
Phone: 1-717-727-0071
Address: 201 South 30th Street
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17103
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