Iowa Cemeteries

United States Iowa Iowa Cemeteries

Finding Cemetery Records
Cemetery records can be found in various places, but the most common are:


 * Online Records
 * Published Records
 * Visit the Cemetery

Online
With the explosion of family history research, there are a number of internet sites which can help you find the cemetery where your ancestors are buried. These online sources will usually have information from the actual gravestone but may also have photographs of the stones. None of the below listed sites are complete so check multiple sites. It is not possible to lists all cemetery sites so do google searches for the individual as well.

The following have significant cemetery listings for Iowa State. Sites may be incomplete. They may not list all cemeteries in a county and may not include all burials in a cemetery.


 * Findagrave.com Search for names Enter at least a last name then click Search. Can narrow by first names or dates.
 * This site frequently has tombstone images
 * List of cemeteries statewide for cemeteries in their database
 * You may need to narrow by county
 * Go to Find A Grave Home page, click Search for a cemetery, select the state (Washington), then select from the county list, and press Search.
 * Click on the number below Interments for a cemetery to access names. Click Records arrow to scroll through to the end.


 * Web: Iowa, Find A Grave Index, 1821-2012 at Ancestry.com ($)


 * Billion Graves
 * Cemetery Junction
 * Interment.net
 * IowaGravestonses.org
 * Iowa WPA Graves Registration
 * Saving Graves
 * USGenWeb
 * Webcemeteries

Published Records
These records can be found in book form or on the Internet. To locate cemetery books visit the library in the county or town where your ancestor died. A good source to locate published cemetery records is the Family History Library Catalog and WorldCat.

Cemetery tombstones, or sexton's records, may give birth and death dates, age at death, name of spouse, names of children, and maiden names. Less often, they contain birth places. Tombstones may have symbols or insignias indicating military service and social or religious affiliations. There are also abbreviations that gives clues when deciphered. Also family members may be buried in the same plot or nearby. The Association of Gravestone Studies (AGS) has recommendations on the treatment and care of tombstones when needing to make inscriptions more visible. There are several major collections of Iowa cemetery records created by various organizations that transcribed tombstones and sexton’s records. Not all cemetery records are computerized and the records may be recorded on "lot" cards.

For further reading on researching cemeteries see Genealogical Research in Cemeteries.

Search each collection because no collection includes all the cemeteries, although there maybe some duplication. Some of the collections include the following:


 * Iowa Cemetery and Grave Registration Project of the W.P.A. and D.A.R. This is the most comprehensive cemetery collection for Iowa. The records are listed by county and then alphabetically by the names of persons buried in that county. The Iowa WPA Graves Registration has a searchable site.


 * Iowa Cemeteries These records were filmed at Des Moines, Iowa. The cemeteries are listed by county, starting with Adair County. The records give location, history, and a physical description of most cemeteries. Headstones are listed by rows.


 * Iowa Genealogical Data The DAR Library in Washington, D.C., contains Iowa volumes 1–24, 41–62. (For volumes 33–34, 36–39, see the collection below.) Most volumes are indexed. The State Historical Society of Iowa (see Iowa Archives and Libraries) has a collection of 85 DAR volumes. There is also a short guide indicating which volumes contain information about specific counties. (See the Iowa Bible Records for the library call number of the guide.)


 * Iowa Grave Records and Genealogical Data, 1800–1900 Information is by county. This set contains DAR volumes 1–4, 7, 9–10, 12–15, 33–34, 36–39, 41, 44–46, 49, 53, 56, and 80. Use this collection with the one above because many of the volumes missing here are in the above collection.


 * For Iowa soldiers who died in other states see Iowa veterans buried out of state, Graves Registration Service, a division of the Adjutant General's Department.

Cemetery Locations
Thousands of cemetery locations can be found at Iowa: Cemetery Locations.

A project to locate all cemeteries in Iowa is published in Iowa Cemetery Locations. Each volume of this series covers one region and includes county maps showing cemetery locations. Many of the cemetery records listed have been published by the Iowa Genealogical Society and are available at the Family History Library Catalog. Many cemetery records are published in periodicals. See the Iowa Periodicals for indexes to major periodicals.

Use the Keyword Search feature on catalog drop down menu of the Family History Library Catalog to find more records under:


 * IOWA - CEMETERIES
 * IOWA, [COUNTY] - CEMETERIES
 * IOWA, [COUNTY], [TOWN] - CEMETERIES