-
Blankenbeker Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing 3 known internments. Burials range from 1857-1885.
-
Black Cemetery (Big Bone, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing 6 known internments. Burials range from 1858-1889. The cemetery location was mapped in 2000.
-
Big Bone Baptist Church Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a church cemetery for the earliest church in the Big Bone region. It contains hundreds of internments, and is still in active use.
-
Beaver Lick Baptist Church Cemetery (Beaver Lick, Ky.)
This is a church cemetery containing 75 known internments. Burials range from 1835-1936. The cemetery is located on both sides of Dickerson Road.
-
Beasley Cemetery (Francisville, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing 2 known internments. Burials range from 1836-1838. Note: Information on stones gathered from private informant.
-
Bates Cemetery (Francisville, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing 1 known internment dating to 1830. It was reported August 2001.
-
Barnard Cemetery (Idlewild, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing 33 known internments. Burials range from 1840-1916.
-
Barlow-Airport Cemetery (Hebron, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery, currently located on airport property. A relocation request was approved June 13, 2017.
-
Barlow Cemetery (Florence, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing 3 known internments. Burials range from 1878-1880. At some point, the headstones were removed.
-
Ballard-Brasher Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery measuring over 20 x 30 feet, and containing 6 known internments. Burials range from 1828-1858.
-
Baker-Rouse Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery measuring 50 x 50 feet, and containing more than 18 known internments. Burials range from 1830-1892.
-
Ashbrook-Cheek Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This cemetery is listed in Find A Grave, but does not have enough information to positively identify it within Boone County. The graves may have been relocated to the Florence Cemetery (Florence, Ky.).
-
Ann Popham Cemetery (Hebron, Ky.)
This was a family cemetery measuring 20 x 10 feet, and containing 2 known internments dating from 1847. Relocation of the burials to Hebron Lutheran Church Cemetery was approved March 7, 2017.
-
Anderson Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing more than 16 internments. Burials range from 1877-1899.
-
Allphin Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery measuring 0.13 acres, and containing 6 rows of known internments extending for at least 100 feet. Burials range from 1827-1888.
-
Allen Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing 5 known internments. Burials range from 1824-1873.
-
Adams-Riley Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery measuring 60 x 60 feet, and containing more than 20 internments. Burials range from 1841-1870. The cemetery was vandalized at one point. It is located off Hathaway Road, due north of 2444 Hathaway and west of 9835 Spruce Dr. The cemetery is in a one of a number of heavily overgrown wooded areas that run along the eastern side of the 108-acre Kenkel property. It is about 1500 north of Hathaway Road and 500 feet west of Spruce Dr. At the time of the site visit, the property was under consideration for residential development. Cemetery mapped and delineated by an archaeologist on November, 2007. All of the legible markers listed above appear to have been intentionally broken and are, at best, fragmentary. Most of them are located in a small area where it appears they dragged and then broken. It is unlikely that any of them are in situ. The broken Louisa Adams marker may be close to its original location. In addition, there are other in situ fieldstone and finished stone markers scattered across the area, which measures about 45 by 50 feet. While there are no Adams located in this area on the 1883 Atlas, the Riley family owned property immediately to the west, including what is now recorded in the National Register as the Blankenbeker-Riley Farm, built 1913.
-
Acra Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery measuring 0.5 acres, and containing 9 known internments. Burials range from 1867-1909. According to census records, John B. and Permelia were both born in Virginia and as James M. was born in Kentucky, they may have been brothers, and family come to Boone County after 1807.
-
Abraham Rouse Cemetery (Florence, Ky.)
Located in what is now the Brookside at Farmview subdivision, this family cemetery measures 40 x 45 feet, and contains 5 known internments dating from 1835. Mrs. Charlotte Bradford Wilson, an elderly lady residing now in Florence, KY, reported this cemetery some time past. She lived near the site for many years with her parents, and remembered the old graveyard as a Rouse Cemetery from the inscriptions on the stones. The Atlas of 1883, Florence Pct. as being the E. D. Crigler place, and across Gunpowder Creek, the Ellen Rouse place. Mrs. M. E. Woodward of Independence, KY remembers the old cemetery too and was told by her father that his parents (see above) on his mother's side were buried there. There was also a connection with a Rosa Rouse, and she may also be interred at that point. She is reported in the Boone County Vital Statistics as being aged 73; Died Sept. 1, 1856; parents Joshua & M. Rouse; birthplace; Virginia. A search has been underway for several years and yielded the above data just recently. A visit was made at 8409 Pleasant Valley Road, where the resident pointed out where three gravestones were up to recently, when they disappeared. They were in the center of a meadow as described previously by Mrs. Wilson, to the researcher. The resident at 8409 also said the land was now owned by Erpenbecks, formerly Kahmanns.
-
A.S. Crisler Cemetery (Burlington, Ky.)
Located in the Carters Mill subdivision, this is a family cemetery measuring 50 x50 feet, and containing 2 known internments. Burials range from 1897-1904. The above stone is near the Gunpowder Church, which on the 1883 map was on property, or near property, of the above man. (the church has its own deed registered in Courthouse deed book) according to 1880 Census, the above were Mr. and Mrs. Abram Crisler, both, as well as parents, born in Virginia. Living with them were daughters Lucy Ann 29, and Missouri 19; both born in Kentucky. Next door was son John 38, and wife Mary E. 35. Their children were Emma 10, Elisabeth 7, and Mary 2. All born in Kentucky. The Crislerswere also from Madison County VA and part of Germanna settlement in early 1700's. The land was once owned by Leonard Crisler in 1825, when he sold land for the old church on June 18th. At the time, a John Crisler was a trustee of the Gunpowder Baptist Church . Researched by Wm. Conrad. NOTE: In 1999, there was a proposal to relocate this cemetery because of the Carter’s Mill Subdivision being developed there. However, after some of the descendants of the Crislers
came forward with objections, Rhein Interests withdrew their relocation proposal (see Fiscal Court minutes October 26, 1999). The cemetery was incorporated into the subdivision.
-
Bethel Baptist Church Cemetery (Union, Ky.)
Bethel Baptist Church was located on Frogtown Road near Union. The church was organized in July 1812. In 1818 Revolutionary War veteran Hugh Steers donated the land for a church building. The church died out in the late 1800s.
-
Hopeful Lutheran Church Cemetery (Florence, Ky.)
This is a church cemetery measuring 11.3 acres, and containing hundreds of internments. It is still in active use.
-
Hebron Lutheran Church Cemetery (Hebron, Ky.)
This is a church cemetery measuring 2.2 acres, and containing hundreds of internments. It is still in active use.
-
Joshua Zimmerman Cemetery (Florence, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery known to contain 2-3 internments.
-
Hensley-Johnson Cemetery (Boone County, Ky.)
This is a family cemetery containing an unknown number of internments. It was recorded by USGS.