Genealogy Projects tagged with Vigo County on the Geni Family Tree

« Back to Projects Dashboard

  • Terre Haute, Indiana

    Please add profiles of those who were born, lived or died in Terre Haute, Indiana. Official Website Terre Haute is the county seat of Vigo County and is located on the Wabash River. The construction of Fort Harrison in 1811 marked the known beginning of a permanent population of European-Americans. A Wea Indian village already existed near the fort, and the orchards and meadows they kept a f...

  • Vigo County, Indiana

    Please add profiles for those who were born, lived or died in Vigo County, Indiana. Official Website Established in 1818, the county is named for Colonel Francis Vigo, of Italian heritage but a citizen of Spain due to residence in St. Louis. He is credited with assisting George Rogers Clark, both in financing Clark's exploration and American Revolutionary War efforts, and in service as an age...

  • Grandview Cemetery, Terre Haute, Indiana

    This project is for those buried in Grandview Cemetery, Terre Haute, Vigo County, Indiana. Find a Grave

  • Calvary Cemetery, Terre Haute, Indiana

    The cemetery is located on 4227 Wabash Avenue, Terre Haute, Vigo County, Indiana. Catholic Cemeteries Assoc. Find a Grave

  • Roselawn Memorial Park, Terre Haute, Indiana

    The cemetery is located in Otter Creek Township (E Half of Section 23 Township 13N Range 9W) on the west side of N Clinton Street between E Desi Avenue and E 77 ½ Avenue in Terre Haute, Vigo County, Indiana. Indiana Cemetery Locations, Volume 3, published by the Indiana Genealogical Society (April 2007), gives the primary cemetery name as Rose Lawn Memorial Park. The cemetery is listed in the...

  • Mount Pleasant Cemetery,Terre Haute, Vigo County, Indiana, USA

    Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, Terre Haute, Vigo County, Indiana, USA: Find a Grave

  • Woodlawn Cemetery, Terre Haute, Indiana

    Woodlawn Cemetery is the oldest extant cemetery in Terre Haute, Vigo County, Indiana. After its establishment in 1839, families began removing remains from other local cemeteries to be re-interred in Woodlawn. In the years following its opening, the cemetery donated land for the establishment of Catholic and Jewish cemeteries. Several mayors of Terre Haute, along with other local notables, are ...