Our Family's Journey Through Time

(also known as Bushnell National Cemetery, U.S. Military Cemetery)
Bushnell, Sumter, Florida
Find a Grave: #109404
Plot:
National Cemetery
| Date | 1980 |
| File name | Cemetery-FLORIDA NATIONAL (Bushnell FL).jpg |
| File Size | 114.49k |
| Dimensions | 648 x 457 |
| Linked to | Find a Grave (Military Cemetery-Florida National); Teddy J R Glore (Burial); Patricia Christine 'Pat' Loveless (Burial); Arthur Rudy Pleasant (Burial); Margaret Elaine Saboyrin (Burial); James Donald Strang (Burial) |
Florida National Cemetery, Bushnell, Sumter County, Florida, USA
Notes: In 1842, Congress encouraged settlement here by establishing the Armed Occupation Act. The law granted a patent for 160 acres to any man who kept a gun and ammunition, built a house, cultivated five acres of the land and remained there for at least five years. Settlers moved in to take advantage of the generous offer. The area contained abundant timber and suitable farmland, appealing attributes to frontiersmen. In 1845 Florida was granted statehood.
During the Civil War, a sugar mill on the Homosassa River supplied sugar to the Confederacy. A robust citrus-growing industry developed in the eastern part of the area and became a focus of intense economic expansion soon after the war.
In 1980, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced that it would establish a new national cemetery in Florida, its fourth. Two major locations for the cemetery were studied: Cross Florida Barge Canal and Withlacoochee State Forest. The Withlacoochee site, though more environmentally sensitive, was supported by government officials. On Feb. 15, 1983, the state transferred land to the VA for the development of a Florida National Cemetery. The first interment was in 1988.
The cemetery features a Memorial Pathway that is lined with a variety of memorials that honor America's veterans. As of 2003, there were 47 such memorials at Florida National Cemetery, most commemorating soldiers and veterans of 20th-century conflicts.
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