Flushing Cemetery
Flushing Cemetery is a non-sectarian burial ground situated at 163-06 46th Avenue in Flushing, Queens, New York City.[1] Established in 1853 through the efforts of local citizens who formed the Flushing Cemetery Association and acquired an initial 21 acres from a farm, it originally enforced bylaws restricting interments to white individuals, a policy formalized in a 1864 resolution and gradually relaxed by the late nineteenth century.[2][3] The cemetery has since expanded to approximately 75 acres, accommodating over 45,000 burials that reflect evolving demographics, from early white settlers to later African American notables and recent immigrant communities marked by Greek and Chinese inscriptions.[4][2] Among its prominent interments is jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong, whose 1971 funeral procession concluded there, alongside figures such as financier Bernard Baruch and pioneering aviator Eugene Bullard, the first African American military fighter pilot.[5][2] Notable features include a memorial pavilion honoring veterans and a dedicated monument to victims of the September 11, 2001, attacks.[6]