Cedar Memorial

Cedar Memorial

Location of Cedar Memorial

Details
Established 1929
Location Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Country United States of America
Coordinates 42°01′23″N 91°38′02″W / 42.023°N 91.634°W / 42.023; -91.634
Type Public
Owned by

(Original) Carl K. Linge

(Present) Carl John Linge
Size 72 acres (29 ha)

Cedar Memorial is a cemetery and funeral home located in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

Location

The park is on 1st Avenue between Cedar Rapids and Marion and includes a wooded cemetery, a natural limestone funeral home, a modern cremation center, a full-service reception facility, a full-service flower shop, and a chapel and mausoleum patterned after old world churches of England.

The park is 82 acres (330,000 m2) in size, and offers traditional burial, lawn crypts, indoor mausoleum entombment and cremation gardens. There are also several columbariums in the cemetery with niches for burial of cremated remains.

History

C. John Linge is the President of the Cedar Memorial Park Cemetery. He is the third generation of Linges to oversee the cemetery. The cemetery was founded by his grandfather Carl K. Linge. In 1929, Carl K. Linge bought a farm between Cedar Rapids and Marion and began planning the cemetery. Carl K. Linge died in 1963 and his son, David E. Linge (the second generation) became president. David E. Linge had been working with his father for a number of years. David founded The Cedar Memorial Funeral Home Company in 1965 creating the first combination operation in the state of Iowa with a funeral home on the cemetery grounds. David also oversaw the addition of over 4500 lawn crypts in the cemetery. David died in 1988 and his son, Carl John Linge became president of the cemetery association. James B. Klinger served as president of the funeral home company until 2004 at which time C. John Linge assumed the responsibilities of president of the funeral home company. He oversaw the addition of the Cedar Cremation Center, the Family Center and Library, the Corridor of Hope in the Chapel of Memories Mausoleum, Iowa Cremation and Companions for Life.

References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 05, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.