Lancaster, Ohio is home to a 200-year-old historical curiosity - Stonewall Cemetery Park, the future final resting place of any American President who wants to claim it.
The story began in 1817, when local resident Nathaniel Wilson III set aside a strip of land on his estate to be used as a family burial ground. In October of that year, he deeded the site to President James Monroe and his successors forever in trust. Wilson passed away in 1839, but his son completed the project, surrounding it with 7-foot-high sandstone walls.
An inscription reads:
"This wall, which encloses the family burying ground of Nathaniel Wilson (one of the early Pioneers of the West, who emigrated from Cumberland County, Pennsylvania and settled near this place AD 1798, when all around was one continued and uninhabited wilderness) was commenced by him AD 1838 and finished in the following year by his son Gustin, the former having suddenly died May 12, 1839."
Monroe never took ownership of the property, but for several generations, Fairfield County officials made a point to notify subsequent administrations of the cemetery's availability. They later claimed the property in 1960 and turned conservatorship over to Fairfield County Parks. Today, it's something of a unique tourist attraction.
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Trivia
- For more information about this unique Ohio tourist attraction, please visit Roadside America.
- President Monroe visited the nearby state capital of Columbus in August 1817 as part of a 15-week tour aimed at building national unity. Could this have been the inspiration for Wilson's gift?
- Planning a trip to Lancaster? Consider taking a tour of the abandoned and supposedly haunted Fairfield County Infirmary, which features remnants of the anthology series American Horror Story: Freak Show. Check it out on Roadside America.





















