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Old City Cemetery

Item

Title
Old City Cemetery
Alternative Title
Old City Cemetery
Identifier
Oldest Historic Site in Murfreesboro
Access Information - The cemetery is surrounded by a high wire fence and the entrance gate is kept padlocked by the city. To enter the cemetery, you must show your driver's license to the mayor's office at City Hall (311 West Vine St.). They will call Bradley Academy, which is the official key holder for the cemetery, and they will allow you to walk in and look around.

Access Information - The cemetery is surrounded by a high wire fence and the entrance gate is kept padlocked by the city. To enter the cemetery, you must show your driver's license to the mayor's office at City Hall (311 West Vine St.). They will call Bradley Academy, which is the official key holder for the cemetery, and they will allow you to walk in and look around.
Creator
Kenneth Tyler, Jr
Type
The “Old City Cemetery” is the oldest historic site in Murfreesboro and encompasses the archaeological remains of the original First Presbyterian Church (1820), its burying ground (1820), and the city’s first public cemetery, opened in 1837. The church was the location of significant social and political events and activities related to the Civil War.

Murfreesboro served as the capital of Tennessee from 1818-1826. The TN legislature met at the church in 1822, as the log county courthouse had burned down. In attendance were James K. Polk, David “Davy” Crockett, Aaron Venable Brown, and several other notable Tennesseans. At this meeting, Andrew Jackson was nominated for his first run for president in 1824. (He later won in 1828).

During the Civil War, the church served as a field hospital, storehouse, encampment, and perhaps a stable. The church was destroyed by Union soldiers and its remains are now one of the best-preserved historic archaeological sites in Tennessee. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, this site represents the early days of “Murfreesborough” and Tennessee.

Founding families, soldiers, the enslaved, and other early residents of the city are buried here. One of the most noticeable headstones in the cemetery is for Nathan Bedford Forrest and his crusaders. Housed in the same cemetery are several unmarked graves of enslaved people that passed in Murfreesboro.
Source
File #26: “305.jpg”
https://rcgis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/View/index.html?appid=b0481352a43442de87bc2080d0f166c6
Date - 1820

File #27: “302.jpg”
https://rcgis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/View/index.html?appid=b0481352a43442de87bc2080d0f166c6
Date - 1839
prefix name
The buried archaeological remains of the 1820 Old First Presbyterian Church
locator
300 E. Vine St, Murfreesboro, TN 37130
annotates
Record of Murfreesboro City Cemetery Compiled by Stones River Children of American Revolution 1968

Wilgus, M., 1981. Murfreesboro's Old City Cemetery:a record of the past. Rutherford County Historical Society Publication No. 17, (17), pp.20-29.

Willard, M., 2017. Nonprofit 'adopts' old City Cemetery in Murfreesboro. Daily News Journal, [online] Available at: <https://www.dnj.com/story/news/local/2017/03/17/rutherford-county-archaeological-society-cemetery-murfreesboro/99121642/> [Accessed 17 November 2021].

Rutherford County Historic Structures, https://rcgis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/View/index.html?appid=b0481352a43442de87bc2080d0f166c6
Bibliographic Citation
Kenneth Tyler, Jr, “Old City Cemetery,” Momentous Murfreesboro , accessed September 11, 2025, https://momentous-murfreesboro.mtsu.edu/admin/items/show/6.