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USGenWeb Project

Sauk County
(Ironton Township)
Resting Green aka Ironton Cemetery
Tombstone Photos

All - Kirby


These photos were generously taken and contributed to these pages by Larry & Linda Kopet!   Please take a moment to thank them for this terrific resource!  Use your back browser button to return to this page. Please note that these generous contributions do not necessarily depict all tombstone photographs for a given cemetery.


All, Lawrence S. and Marguerite A.
All, Martha (female infant)
All, Mary Madeline
All, P.
All, Peter
All, Phebe A.
All, Raymond S. and family
All, William A. and Merrideth F.
All, William W.
Allbaugh, Clement V. and Marjorie E.
Allen, Charles E.
Allen, J.
Allen, Jacob
Allert, Ervin T. Jr. and Carol F. Beardsley
Allert, Ervin T. Sr. and Sarah R.
Allert, Raymond A. and Tessie I.
Anderson, Andrew H. and Edith F.
Anderson, Fannie I.
Anderson, Norma N.
Anderson, Scott P.
Andrews, Arthur
Andrews, Cornelia
Andrews, David and Clarissa A.
Andrews, Eleazer
Andrews, Frank
Andrews, Jane
Andrews, Melissa
Andrews, Nancy
Andrews, Samuel
Atkinson, Nelson and Minnie A.
Bailey, Walter J. and Wilma M.
Ballentine, Mildred
Ballentine, Paul C.
Ballentine, Sarah
Ballentine, William
Banks, Lenra
Bates, Susan
Bates, unclear
Bauer, Peter and Atsy
Bedell, William
Bellomo, Joseph A. and Roberta R.
Benak, Norah B. and Mary
Bennett, Eva M. Hanzlik
Benson, Bernie S.
Benson, Elizabeth
Benson, George W.
Beuchat, Alfred and Annie
Beuchat, Alice
Beuchat, August
Beuchat, Auguste P.
Beuchat, Charlotte L.
Beuchat, Kathryn W.
Beuchat, Max H.
Bible, Charles E. and Joan H.
Bible, Cora E.
Bible, Nellie E. Cleveland
Bible, Wilbert D.
Bilaland, Jane
Bingham, Lyman and Mathilda
Blakeslee, Alfred J. and family
Blakeslee, Donald E.
Blakeslee, Floyd G.
Blakeslee, George E.
Blakeslee, Joseph Gaylord
Blakeslee, Lydia R.
Blanchard, Fay E.
Blanchard, Orrin D. and Hannah Kezar
Blanchard, William H. and Mary E.
Bohn, infant
Booher, Esther R.
Booher, John A. MD
Booher, Jonh S MD
Booher, Mina
Bostwick, Charles H.
Boughton, Jared
Boughton, Matilda
Boughton, Susan H.
Braatz, August
Braatz, Linnie
Brandt, Maynard E. and Agnes M.
Braun, Arthur O.
Braun, Bernard A. and Wendell G.
Braun, Frank J. and Julia M.
Briggs, Charity A.
Briggs, Edmond
Briggs, Hattie C.
Brill, Sylvester
Brimmer, Percy D. and Evalyn K.
Brimmer, Spencer J. and Alice V.
Browning, Bessie
Browning, D.
Browning, Lela and June R.
Browning, Marion F. and Eda Jane
Browning, Marion L.
Bryden, David and Julia A.
Burgess, Arthur Jr.
Burgess, Christine
Burgess, Hattie
Burgess, John and Lena
Burgess, M. and Sarah
Burgess, Merlin and family
Burgess, P.
Burgess, Peleg
Burgess, Peter and Ejoretia D. All
Burgess, Richard M.
Burgess, Sarah and Mattie J.
Burgess, Walter James
Burgess, William H.
Burgess, William Sr. and Ruth T.
Butterfield, Ernest R. and Marion M.
Butterfield, Julia E.
Butterfield, Lovell K.
Butterfield, Lovell
Butts, Charles and family
Butts, Charles E. and Doris L. Gray
Butts, Howard J.
Byone, John
Byrne, Anna
Byrne, Catharine
Byrne, Francis
Byrne, Frank E. and Margaret A.
Byrne, James and Ella
Byrne, Joseph
Cameron, Abram
Cameron, Anna
Cameron, Henderson
Cameron, Thomas and Adelaide L.
Carpenter, Ryllan J.
Carr, Daniel and Maria
Clarkson, Abraham and Jemima
Clifford, Mary
Clifford, Michael
Collins, John B.
Collins, Joseph and John B.
Collins, Joseph E.
Collins, Sanford and Caroline
Cooper, Anne J.
Cooper, Martin
Cooper, Mary
Cooper, Minnie
Cooper, Samuel A.
Corterisan, Freddie and Margaret
Costerisan, Alfreda B.
Costerisan, Fred F.
Costerisan, Jessie L.
Costerisan, John J.
Costerisan, Leslie C.
Costerisan, Phoebe E.
Costerisan, Richard
Crahen, Louis M. and Viola H.
Crook, Katie T.
Crook, Peter
Crouse, Brad W.
Crouse, Brad William
Crunshaw, Grace G.
Crunshaw, Henry
Crunshaw, Mary
Crunshaw, Robert H.
Cupinall, Lucinda
Cushman, Almira Warner
Cushman, unclear
Daley, Laureen Stowe
Davey, Owen
Davey, Rachel
Dean, H.
Dean, Harmon
Decot, Eugene and Marie
Decot, Marjory
DePaepe, August and Emerance
Dickens, Abbie Parker
Donley, Mary and Carrie
Donley, Patrick and Maria
Douche, James and Ann
Doyle, Hugh Timothy
Doyle, Jeramiah
Dumproff, Veronica S.
Early, Father
Early, Jennie
Early, Mother
Elliott, Ruby Ann
Faivre, Albert and Hannah
Faivre, Charles E. and Edna L.
Faivre, Earnest F.
Faivre, Eva B.
Faivre, Fred
Faivre, George A. and Sarah
Faivre, Harvey R.
Faivre, Jacques
Faivre, Justin
Featherston, Lenora A.
Featherston, Thomas and Mary
Featherston, Thomas
Feivor, Eugene
Feivor, Frank P. and Ethel M.
Feivor, Fred T. and Florence D. Shannon
Feivor, Mary
Feivor, Noel R.
Feivor, Robert D. and Vera B.
Fietier, Eugene
Fietier, Frances
Finnegan, Bridget
Finnegan, Frank J.
Finnegan, Frank
Finnegan, Patrick and Mary
Finnegan, William
Fischer, Herman
Fisher, Andrew
Fisher, Billy
Fisher, Milo
Fletcher, Frank
Fletcher, Mary E.
Foller, Putnam
Frank, Georga A.
Frank, Lawrence G. and Olive M.
Frank, Paul and Bernadine V.
Frank, Paul C.
Gage, Mabel T.
Ganly, Catherine
Ganly, John
Ganly, Mary
Ganly, William
Gasser, Alfred LeRoy
Gasser, Arthur and Catherine
Gasser, Arthur L. and Catherine
Gasser, Berneice C.
Gasser, Charles and Sarah
Gasser, Cyril L.
Gasser, Eugene and Mary
Gasser, Frank C. and E. Pearl
Gasser, George E.
Gasser, Harold J. and Audrey M.
Gasser, infants
Gasser, LeRoy Leonard
Gasser, Martin C. and Margaret E.
Gasser, Mary M.
Gates, Gustave and Mary
Giblin, A.
Giblin, Alice
Giblin, J.
Giblin, James
Giblin, Mary
Giblin, Robert
Good, Beverly (female infant)
Good, Chad D. (male infant)
Goodrich, Nelson
Griffin, Abraham
Griffin, Bernice Maude
Griffin, Ella May
Griffin, Henryetta LaGrange
Griffin, William W.
Groat, Edmund Tordoff
Groat, Francis M.
Groat, frederick and family
Groat, Frederick J.
Groat, Frederick
Groat, Jane E. Tordoff
Groat, Jennie Butman
Groat, William H.
Grover, Daniel
Grover, William M.
Gutman, Benjamin F.
Hagerty, Leo E. and Elaine L.
Hagerty, Mary
Hagerty, Timothy
Hainstock, Leonard R. and Ruby E.
Hainstock, Richard and Catherine
Hainstock, Thomas
Hainstock, William and Nellie A.
Halligan, Barney and family
Hanzlik, Joseph Wenzel
Hanzlik, Kathina M.
Hanzlik, Winzel J.
Harrison, G.
Harrison, Geo.
Harrison, George
Harrison, James
Harrison, Johanna
Harrison, Martha
Harrison, Mary Cameron
Harrison, Minnie Maria
Hawkins, Alice A.
Hawkins, Amy Blanch
Hawkins, Franklin E.
Hawkins, Hiram H. and Margrette Adaline
Hawkins, Hiram
Hawkins, Muzetta P.
Hearn, George and family
Hearn, infant and family
Hearn, John and Mabel G.
Hearn, Lucy
Hearn, Samuel
Henderson, Margaret Groat
Howard, Hiram
Hubbill, Charles E.
Hubbill, Florence M.
Hunt, Harold and Gertrude
Hunt, Joseph M. and Leona M.
Hunt, William J. and Ethel
Hurley, Albert
Hurley, Clara D.
Hyslop, Minnie Maie Butman
Ingham, Anna H.
Ingham, Benjamin and Etta
Ingham, Lorell D.
Ingham, Samuel
Ingham, William and Catherine L.
Inman, George
Janechek, Harry H. and Dorothea
Jaquish, B.
Jaquish, Hattie
Jaquish, Wallace
Jasper, Conrad T. and Wanita F.
Jessop, Elizabeth
Jessop, John
Jessop, Joseph and Ann
Jewett, Henry E.
Jewett, unclear female
Karsteier, Annie
Keegan, James
Keegan, Maggie
Keegan, Michael and Catherine
Kelley, Edward
Kelly, Edwin
Kimber, Edward
Kinnamon, Agnes
Kinnamon, David and Mable
Kinnamon, Earnest F. and family
Kinnamon, Fred E.
Kinnamon, Isabella
Kinnamon, John
Kinnamon, Kenneth
Kinnamon, Nancy
Kinnamon, Roxalana
Kinnamon, T. Edward and family
Kinnamon, Thomas B.
Kinnamon, William T.
Kirby, Frances M.

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WISCONSIN MUNICIPALITIES: Cities Towns, and Villages, often referred to as 'municipalities' in Wisconsin law, are the governmental units that relate most directly to citizens' everyday lives.

TOWNS, like counties, were created by the state to provide basic municipal services. Rooted in New England and New York tradition, town government came to Wisconsin with the settlers, but Wisconsin towns were not like their Eastern counterparts that reflected the existing patterns of local settlement. In Wisconsin, towns are geographical subdivisions of counties. Towns originally served (and for the most part they continue to serve) rural areas. Towns govern those areas of Wisconsin not included in the corporate boundaries of cities and villages.

The difference between "township" and "town" often confuses the public. In Wisconsin, "township' refers to the surveyor's township which was laid out to identify land parcels within a county. Theoretically. a township is a square tract of land, measuring six miles on a side for a total of 36 square miles in the unit. Each township is divided into 36 sections. "Town", as the word is used in Wisconsin, denotes a specific unit of government. It's boundaries may coincide with the surveyor's township or it may look quite different. A Town may include one, parts of or several townships.

CITIES and VILLAGES, often referred to as "incorportated areas", govern territory where population is more concentrated. In general, minimum population for incorporation as a village is 150 residents for an isolated village and 2,500 for a metropolitan village located in a more densely settled area. For cities, the minimums are 1,000 and 5,000 respectively. As cities and villages are incorporated, they are carved out of the town territory and become independent units no longer subject to the town's control. The remainder of the town may take on a 'Swiss cheese" configuration as its area is reduced.

[Information above taken from "State of Wisconsin Blue Book 1997-1998"]

WIGenWeb
ProjectCopyright Notice: These generous contributions do not necessarily depict all tombstone photographs for a given cemetery. The source for many of the cemetery names and placenames on these pages come from Cemetery Locations in Wisconsin, 3rd edition, compiled by Linda M. Herrick and Wendy K. Uncapher. The book is published by Origins at 4327 Milton Ave. Janesville, WI 53546. All files on this site are copyrighted by their creator and/or contributor. They may be linked to but may not be reproduced on another site without specific permission from Tina Vickery [mailto:tsvickery@gmail.com] and/or their contributor. Although public information is not in and of itself copyrightable, the format in which they are presented, the notes and comments, etc., are. It is however, quite permissable to print or save the files to a personal computer for personal use ONLY.

This page was last updated 20 November 2012