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248:(DOD). A portion of this lease was terminated and the title for 749.29 acres (303.23 ha) was transferred to the VA’s National Cemetery System in 1976. The Otis tract became the first parcel of land acquired by the National Cemetery System for the specific purpose of building a new national cemetery since 1949.
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was looking to expand, it determined that the largest veteran population in the northeast was centered in the Boston area. A search soon commenced to find a suitable site for a national cemetery, nearby. The difficult task of locating land which would be available to the government at no cost
228:(VA). The following year, the VA’s National Cemetery System adopted the regional cemetery concept plan in which one large national cemetery would be built within each of the 10 standard federal regions, as established by the
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339:, on October 15, 1951. Subsequently, his family wished to have him interred in his native state. DeWert was disinterred from the Woodlawn Cemetery in 1987, and re-interred in the Massachusetts National Cemetery.
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The
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in the 1980s. They were identified as members of the "Massachusetts
Volunteer Infantry" by the buttons from their uniforms.
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467:"The forgotten graves of soldiers killed 157 years ago, during the oppressively hot Battle of Blackburn's Ford"
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eventually led to the identification of a 749-acre (303 ha) tract on the 22,000-acre (8,900 ha)
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Massachusetts
National Cemetery has a memorial trail where, as of February 2005, 47 memorials and a
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Unknown Union
Soldiers. Interred in 2007. The remains were unearthed during highway excavation in
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U.S. Geological Survey
Geographic Names Information System: Massachusetts National Cemetery
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as the most likely site. The base occupied land that was leased to the
331:. Originally buried in Korea, DeWert was re-interred at the
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Veterans cemetery in
Barnstable County, Massachusetts
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403:(1919–2004). US Army Air Forces pilot who flew the
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397:(1918–2006). Major League Baseball player
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379:(1921–2014). World War II flying ace
367:(1921–2006). World War II flying ace
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502:U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
435:Mediterranean Theater of Operations
308:at Massachusetts National Cemetery
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494:"Massachusetts National Cemetery"
33:Committal Shelter in the Cemetery
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521:Massachusetts National Cemetery
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373:(1925–2003). Sports broadcaster
323:(1931–1951). Killed during the
235:During the mid-1970s, when the
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170:Massachusetts National Cemetery
22:Massachusetts National Cemetery
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442:(1931–2014). Cinematographer
220:which transferred 82 of the
202:Otis Air National Guard Base
224:national cemeteries to the
138:749.3 acres (303.2 ha)
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352:Operation Enduring Freedom
333:Woodlawn National Cemetery
329:2nd Battalion 7th Marines
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555:Symbols of Massachusetts
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504:(VA). January 22, 2009
391:(1916–2011). Ballerina
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550:Bourne, Massachusetts
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218:National Cemetery Act
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186:Bourne, Massachusetts
149:>78,000 as of 2021
101:41.67306°N 70.58333°W
61:Bourne, Massachusetts
383:Frank “Bucko” Kilroy
222:United States Army’s
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287:to the modern era.
242:Otis Air Force Base
106:41.67306; -70.58333
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405:B-29 Superfortress
348:United States Army
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212:On June 18, 1973,
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429:(1922–1987). Top
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314:Hospital Corpsman
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506:. Retrieved
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165:Find a Grave
417:atomic bomb
371:Ken Coleman
285:World War I
216:passed the
184:located in
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79:Coordinates
48:Established
539:Categories
508:2009-06-11
498:Cemeteries
476:2018-10-23
454:References
337:Elmira, NY
325:Korean War
265:California
92:70°35′00″W
89:41°40′23″N
146:of graves
421:Nagasaki
409:Bockscar
281:carillon
257:New York
214:Congress
194:Cape Cod
125:Owned by
56:Location
414:Fat Man
208:History
154:Website
68:Country
43:Details
259:, and
120:Public
188:, in
180:is a
342:SFC
321:USNR
304:SFC
135:Size
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51:1973
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