🚧 PANICd.com is currently being upgraded to a new experience. Some pages may look different during construction, with links not working correctly. WE ARE ACTIVELY WORKING ON THE SITE!
While postwar America struggled to make a place for its African American citizens, a group called the Sons of Good Will created the Lincoln Cemetery in 1867 to ensure "the proper burial of Gettysburg's African American citizens and Civil War veterans."
Location history

A full narrative history section

While postwar America struggled to make a place for its African American citizens, a group called the Sons of Good Will created the Lincoln Cemetery in 1867 to ensure "the proper burial of Gettysburg's African American citizens and Civil War veterans." Located between South Washington Street and Long Lane, walking distance from the Soldiers National Cemetery, the Lincoln Cemetery holds more than 30 members of the United States Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.). It is the final resting place of most local U.S.C.T. veterans. The first African American veteran was buried in Soldiers' National Cemetery in November 1884, when the remains of Henry Gooden, 127th United States Colored Troops, were moved from the Alms House burial ground in Gettysburg to the United States Regulars lot. The national cemetery's second African American veteran, Charles H. Parker, 3rd United States Colored Troops, was buried in November 1936 after disinterment from the Yellow Hill Cemetery, north of Gettysburg.
Source: LINK
Find resisting place of Basil Biggs who was one of the individuals responsible with removing the dead throughout town and relocating them to the National Cemetery.
Source: LINK
Ghost stories and folklore

Paranormal narrative section

A photograph of a grey blur within the cemetery was posted on Trip Advisor.
Source: LINK
Paranormal claims
Photographic anomalies such as a large grey mass has been recorded while touring outside the cemetery at night.