Wisconsin


Wisconsin holds a special place in the green burial movement, home to some of the earliest and most spiritually grounded natural cemeteries in the country. From sacred Pagan woodlands and prairie restoration projects to arboretum burials in the heart of Milwaukee, this state reminds us that death and renewal are inseparable parts of the same natural cycle.

Across Wisconsin, you’ll find places where wildflowers grow in place of headstones, where families gather under oak canopies instead of chapels, and where conservation and commemoration walk hand in hand.



🌿Natural Path Sanctuary, Verona, WI

Just outside Madison, in the rolling meadows and quiet woods of the Linda & Gene Farley Center for Peace, Justice, and Sustainability, lies Natural Path Sanctuary, 25 acres of forest and prairie where the fullness of life beautifully balances the sorrow of death. Here, burial is not about separation from the earth, but about returning to it, nourishing new growth and continuing the cycle of life.
June 2011 Natural Path Sanctuary opened as Wisconsin’s first green cemetery, located within the Farley Center’s conservation land. It remains one of the few burial grounds in the country directly tied to an educational and social justice mission, promoting sustainability in life, death, and everything between.
Every burial at Natural Path Sanctuary supports more than just the land, it sustains the Farley Center’s programs in peace, justice, sustainability, and local farming. Proceeds and legacy donations help fund farm incubators, community gardens, and global initiatives aimed at creating a more just and equitable world. In this way, even after death, those buried here continue Linda’s work of healing people and the planet.
Walking the wooded trails of Natural Path Sanctuary, visitors find a quiet, sacred balance, where mourning and gratitude coexist, and where wildflowers, birds, and sunlight move among the natural markers of those returned to the soil. Families are invited to visit anytime during daylight hours to rest, reflect, and remember.



🌿Sòlas Natural Burial Preserve, Middleton, WI

Just outside of Madison, Sòlas Natural Burial Preserve offers a modern, mindful approach to returning to the earth. This 20-acre sanctuary is officially certified by the Green Burial Council, ensuring that every burial helps protect soil health, water quality, and local biodiversity.

Sòlas (pronounced “SO-lahs,” meaning “comfort” or “light” in Gaelic) was founded with the mission of creating a burial ground that feels alive, a place for both remembrance and renewal. The preserve is home to winding walking trails, native wildflowers, and restored prairie grasses. Visitors are encouraged to walk, reflect, and find peace in the simplicity of nature.

No metal. No concrete. No polished stone.
Each burial here honors the earth through biodegradable materials only , simple shrouds, untreated wood, or natural fiber caskets. There are no vaults, no embalming, and no non-degradable materials allowed. Even grave markers blend with the landscape: families may choose a native plant, tree, or flower to honor their loved one, or opt for a simple flat fieldstone.
Sòlas blends ancient wisdom with modern tools. Every burial site is marked by GPS and recorded digitally. Families can also choose a Digital Headstone™ a personalized online page that serves as a living memorial, accessible from anywhere in the world.
In addition to human burials, pet burials are welcome in a designated section of the preserve, offering a way to reunite companions in a shared resting place. There’s also a special Veterans’ area to honor those who have served, with equal respect for environmental integrity.



🌿Circle Cemetery at Circle Sanctuary, Barneveld, WI

Tucked into the rolling hills of southwest Wisconsin, Circle Cemetery is one of the oldest green cemeteries in the United States and the very first to be established on a nature preserve. Founded in 1995, this 20-acre cemetery rests within the 200-acre Circle Sanctuary Nature Preserve, a sacred space where forest, prairie, and spirituality intertwine.
Circle Cemetery was created to honor the dead while protecting the living landscape, combining natural burial with environmental conservation. Burials here return bodies to the earth without embalming, vaults, or metal caskets, using only biodegradable shrouds, pine boxes, or wicker caskets. Cremated remains may also be scattered or interred among the woodlands and restored prairie.

Each resting place is simple and natural, some marked by flat granite stones, others left unmarked, blending seamlessly with the land. This quiet humility allows the forest and prairie to remain alive and unbroken, honoring both the earth and those who rest within it.
Operated by Circle Sanctuary, an international Nature Spirituality church and resource center, Circle Cemetery serves practitioners of Paganism, Wicca, and other nature-honoring paths, as well as individuals of diverse beliefs seeking a sacred connection to the natural world.

Atop the forested ridge lies Veterans’ Ridge, where Pagan and Wiccan veterans are honored with U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs–issued gravestones. It stands as one of the few places in the nation where Pagan veterans are officially recognized for their service.

The cemetery features multiple outdoor spaces for funerals, memorials, and rituals, including a microlithic Stone Circle in an oak grove on a natural mound. Visitors are welcome for special events throughout the year, from quiet memorial days to large seasonal gatherings celebrating the cycles of nature.

Circle Sanctuary itself, founded in 1974 by Rev. Selena Fox, serves as a global center for education, interfaith dialogue, environmental preservation, and Nature-based spiritual practice. The organization hosts festivals, classes, and ceremonies that honor the turning of the seasons, including Samhain, Beltane, and the Pagan Spirit Gathering, one of the largest Pagan festivals in the country.

More than just a cemetery, Circle Sanctuary embodies a vision of spiritual ecology, a world where people live and die in harmony with nature. The preserve’s forests, meadows, and prairies are protected through active conservation, restoration, and community stewardship.



🌿Prairie Rest at Forest Home Cemetery & Arboretum, Milwaukee, WI

In the heart of Milwaukee’s historic Forest Home Cemetery & Arboretum, a new chapter in sustainable remembrance is blooming, Prairie Rest, the cemetery’s dedicated green burial section.

Here, native wildflowers sway among prairie grasses, birds nest in restored habitat, and the cycle of life continues uninterrupted. Prairie Rest honors both heritage and habitat, blending the cemetery’s 170-year legacy with a forward-thinking commitment to the planet.
Every green burial at Prairie Rest uses biodegradable caskets, shrouds, or urns, ensuring the body returns gently to the soil and enriches the ecosystem. There are no concrete vaults, metal hardware, or chemical preservatives, just earth, air, and renewal.

The design of Prairie Rest reflects Wisconsin’s natural beauty, open meadows framed by granite boulders that serve as shared monuments, engraved with names and dates of those who rest nearby. Families can locate their loved one’s resting place using GPS coordinates, merging ancient simplicity with modern connection.
Green burial at Prairie Rest is not only a gift to nature, it’s also one of the most affordable burial options available. Families can pre-purchase property and burial fees, with options for family and companion plots nestled within the prairie’s edge.
Founded in 1850, Forest Home Cemetery & Arboretum was one of America’s earliest garden-style cemeteries, designed as a peaceful rural retreat where people could stroll among trees, monuments, and artful plantings. Today, the addition of Prairie Rest extends that vision, protecting biodiversity while continuing the site’s tradition of beauty, reflection, and public access.

Visitors can explore nearly 200 acres of certified arboretum land, where historic architecture meets living ecology, a landscape that reminds us that life, death, and renewal are all part of one great cycle.



🌿Prairie Green at Greenwood Cemetery, Milwaukee, WI

Nestled beside Forest Home Cemetery’s historic grounds, Prairie Green at Greenwood Cemetery offers a beautiful union of faith, tradition, and sustainability, one of Wisconsin’s first Green Burial Council–certified Jewish cemeteries.

Here, the prairie hums with life, wildflowers, tall grasses, and native trees create a tranquil landscape where burials return gently to the earth. Prairie Green is both a renewal of ancient Jewish burial customs and a reflection of modern ecological awareness, proving that honoring life and caring for the planet can go hand in hand.
For centuries, Jewish burial practices have aligned seamlessly with the core principles of green burial, simplicity, humility, and respect for the natural cycle of life and death. Like traditional Jewish funerals, green burials at Prairie Green avoid embalming, use biodegradable shrouds or caskets, and forgo vaults, allowing the body to decompose naturally and nourish the land.
Prairie Green was developed following Green Burial Council standards, ensuring that each interment supports the health of the land. Burials are made directly into the earth, surrounded by native plantings that restore biodiversity and invite pollinators to thrive.

Rather than upright headstones, memorial boulders line the prairie’s edge. Skilled inscription artists engrave each name and date into natural stone, connecting loved ones to the land they now nurture. Each site can be located by GPS coordinates, allowing visitors to honor their loved ones while preserving the natural flow of the prairie.
Founded in 1872, Greenwood Cemetery is one of Milwaukee’s oldest active Jewish cemeteries, independent, nontraditional, and inclusive. It welcomes non-Jewish spouses and children to rest alongside their loved ones, emphasizing that family unity and compassion transcend boundaries.

Though Greenwood began as a German Jewish cemetery, it has evolved to serve Milwaukee’s wider Jewish community for over 150 years. Its partnership with neighboring Forest Home Cemetery ensures the grounds are beautifully maintained, dignified, and serene.
Prairie Green represents the best of both worlds, an environmentally conscious choice grounded in timeless spiritual values. It honors the past, sustains the present, and safeguards the earth for the generations yet to come.




If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please  reach out!

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November 6, 2025
New Hampshire In New Hampshire, the land itself tells a story of endurance, granite ledges, maple forests, and quiet fields that have held generations of families. It’s no surprise that many here are drawn to green burial, a practice that reflects the state’s independent spirit and deep respect for nature. Whether resting beneath sugar maples in autumn or beside a field of mountain laurel, natural burial connects people to the same landscape they cherished in life. It’s a simple, sincere return to the elements, free from chemicals, vaults, and excess, where the body nourishes the land, and the land, in turn, offers peace. 🌿Lotus and Lavender Natural Burial (in progress) - Portsmouth, NH Nestled in the heart of New Hampshire’s Seacoast region, Lotus & Lavender Natural Burial is leading the charge toward a more peaceful, eco-conscious way of returning to the earth. As a 501(c)(13) nonprofit cemetery organization, they are dedicated to creating a true natural burial ground, one where the cycle of life continues uninterrupted, and the land remains protected for generations to come. They’re cur rently looking for land to establish this sanctuary and are inviting the community to be part of this next step. Here’s what they need to get started: 🌾 At least 3 acres in a rural or semi-rural setting ☀️ Mostly cleared land is ideal 📍 Within 30 minutes of Portsmouth (preferred) 💧 No wetlands within 100 ft A gift, sale, or long-term lease of lan d to Lotus & Lavender comes with many benefits, including contributing to a legacy of conservation and community service. All discussions are confidential and handled with care. If you or someone you know has land that might be a fit, reach out and help make New Hampshire’s next natural burial ground a reality. 🌸 If there isn’t a green burial ground nearby, many of New Hampshire’s small-town or church cemeteries are open to dialogue about becoming “hybrid.” Start by speaking with cemetery trustees or the town’s selectboard to ask if bylaws allow for vault waivers or biodegradable caskets. Offer to share examples from nearby states or from local conservation groups that have helped establish natural sections. New Hampshire’s strong tradition of local control means community support carries weight, gathering signatures or hosting an informational session can show genuine public interest. With respectful collaboration, even long-established cemeteries can evolve to honor both tradition and the environment that defines the Granite State. If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
Oklahoma 🌿Green Tree Burial Ground - Mead, OK 🌿Green Haven Cemetery - Stillwater, OK If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
Missouri Missouri’s rolling hills, oak forests, and winding rivers have long reflected the rhythm of renewal. Here, green burial feels like a homecoming, simple, grounded, and full of meaning. Families across the state are rediscovering that death care can be both traditional and natural, honoring loved ones without the need for embalming, vaults, or excess. From the Ozark highlands to the fertile plains of the north, Missourians are choosing to return to the earth just as their ancestors did, wrapped in cloth, laid beneath trees, and surrounded by life. It’s a quiet act of love, rooted in the soil that has always sustained them. 🌿Green Acres Natural Burial Cemetery - Rocheport, MO In Missouri, Green Acres, also known as Pushing Up Daisies Inc., was created to give families “the ultimate way of going green.” As a natural burial ground, the cemetery allows only biodegradable materials: no embalming, no metal, no plastic, and no concrete vaults. Its mission is clear, protect the land, air, and water while providing affordable, compassionate burial options. Green Acres was founded on the belief that traditional funerals are often too expensive and environmentally harmful. Here, families can choose natural burial at a fraction of the cost of conventional practices, with flexible payment options and straightforward care. Everything at Green Acres is designed to preserve the earth: graves must use biodegradable containers or shrouds, vaults and liners are prohibited, and only natural flat rocks can be used as markers. The cemetery maintains full stewardship of the grounds, ensuring trails, plantings, and burials blend into the landscape. By choosing Green Acres, families eliminate confusion about their wishes, avoid unnecessary costs, and leave a final act of care for the planet. It’s not just a resting place, it’s a statement of responsibility and love. For Missouri, Green Acres stands as a beacon of what’s possible: an active, dedicated natural burial ground where remembrance and conservation walk hand in hand. 🌿Bellfontaine Cemetery & Arboretum (hybrid) - St. Louis, MO Green burial is permitted throughout all of Bellefontaine Cemetery, whether on a new or existing family lot, or a single grave in a public lot. Individuals can choose to mix green burial options with traditional burial practices to meet specific wishes and desires. For example, one may choose to be un-embalmed, in a shroud, biodegradable, is slower in its return to the earth than a shroud or simple casket. 🌿Zion Cemetery (hybrid) - St. Louis, MO At Zion Cemetery, we take great pride in being one of the few Green Burial Council certified cemeteries in St. Louis. Our commitment to sustainability and environmental preservation sets us apart, providing a meaningful alternative to traditional burial methods. By choosing a green burial at Zion Cemetery, you contribute to a more eco-friendly and natural end-of-life process, leaving a lasting legacy of care for our planet. If your community doesn’t yet have a designated green burial ground, start by reaching out to local cemetery caretakers or boards to discuss creating a natural or hybrid section. Missouri’s agricultural roots make this concept easy to embrace, land stewardship is part of the culture. Ask about existing requirements for vaults or embalming; many small-town cemeteries can amend bylaws with community support. Share examples of successful hybrid models across the Midwest and resources from the Green Burial Council. By working together, you can help transform traditional cemeteries into sanctuaries that celebrate Missouri’s connection to nature and the cycle of life. If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
Montana In Montana, the land feels limitless, mountains rise into the clouds, rivers carve through valleys, and the horizon seems to stretch forever. It’s a place where life and nature are inseparable, and where many Montanans are rediscovering burial traditions that reflect that harmony. Green burial here offers a quiet, grounded return to the earth, without the intrusion of chemicals or concrete. Each natural burial restores life to the land, echoing the rugged simplicity and reverence for nature that defines the Big Sky State. Whether in prairie grasslands or pine forests, Montana’s open spaces remind us that returning to the soil is the most natural act of all. 🌿Mountainview Cemetery (hybrid) - City of Billings, Billings, MT Available in Mountview Cemetery selectively. It's not much, but it's a start. If your community doesn’t yet have a natural burial ground, start by speaking with caretakers or local cemetery boards about adding a “green section.” Montana’s vast landscapes and rural culture make this especially practical, no vaults or heavy maintenance are needed. Ask about existing bylaws regarding vaults or embalming; many can be amended through board approval. Offer examples of hybrid cemeteries in similar climates across the West to demonstrate how simple policy changes can create eco-friendly options. By encouraging dialogue and sharing resources from the Green Burial Council, you can help Montana cemeteries evolve their practices to honor the land’s natural beauty while preserving it for generations to come. If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
Nevada 🌿 If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
New Jersey Known as the Garden State, New Jersey has always held a deep reverence for its landscapes, rolling farmlands, pine forests, and coastal meadows. Green burial here feels like a return to the state’s original promise: harmony between people and place. As urban and suburban communities seek more meaningful, sustainable ways to honor life’s end, natural burial is quietly taking root. Families are rediscovering that simplicity, no embalming, no vaults, no polished metal, can be profoundly beautiful. Whether in the hills of Hunterdon County or near the salt air of the Shore, New Jersey’s green burial movement is reminding families that true peace lies in returning gently to the earth. 🌿Steelmantown Cemetery - Woodbine, NJ Tucked in the Pine Barrens of Cape May County, Steelmantown Cemetery is one of the oldest continually operating natural burial grounds in the country. With burials dating back to the 1700s, this sacred woodland has been restored as a conservation cemetery, where the forest itself is both sanctuary and memorial. Steelmantown permits only biodegradable caskets or shrouds, no embalming, and no vaults or liners. Graves are dug by hand, and families are invited to take part in the process of lowering and covering their loved one, adding to the intimacy and meaning of the farewell. Markers are natural and modest, often simple wooden or stone pieces that allow the forest to remain the focus. Over time, each resting place blends back into the landscape, supporting the ecological health of the Pine Barrens. Once nearly abandoned, Steelmantown was lovingly restored to preserve its heritage and to create a model for how burial grounds can also serve as conservation spaces. Today, it stands as a testament to both history and sustainability, offering New Jersey families a natural way to return to the earth.  🌿Rosemont Cemetery (hybrid) - Rosemont, NJ The Rosemont Cemetery Association is committed to providing quality end of life choices to meet the needs of all in the community it serves while enhancing the Cemetery’s natural beauty and heritage. As such, in addition to providing traditional burial spaces, on Earth Day 2017, the Cemetery unveiled its newest section, the Rosemont Memorial Garden and Natural Burial Area. This opening represents the culmination of years of work to create a meaningful, well-thought out area where those wishing to lessen the environmental impact of burial can choose to rest. Much thought was put into the design of the Rosemont Memorial Garden and Natural Burial Area, which sits at the bottom of the hill, bordered on one side by beautiful woodlands and on another side by a farm field. The concept of this burial area is to provide a peaceful place for loved ones to visit and that is inviting to the community; to those that have loved ones buried here, as well as to those that simply want to find a space of peaceful quiet reflection. The graves in the Memorial Garden are laid out in a series of concentric circles, with the circles representing the circle of life and the community that surrounds the Cemetery. This design concept represents a paradigm shift from the traditional rectangular grave layouts to a more natural layout. To bring natural burial options to your area, start by opening a conversation with local cemetery trustees or sextons. Many New Jersey cemeteries, even historic ones, are finding ways to adapt by offering hybrid sections that allow biodegradable caskets and vault-free burials. Share examples such as Steelmantown Cemetery or Maryrest Cemetery’s natural section to illustrate how successful these integrations can be. Emphasize that adding green options doesn’t require an overhaul, just flexibility in policy and a willingness to meet changing family values. Suggest hosting a community talk or workshop to gauge interest and show that offering green burial isn’t just an environmental choice, it’s an act of stewardship and renewal in the Garden State. If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
New Mexico In New Mexico, where the vast sky meets mesas painted in red and gold, death is seen not as an ending but as a return. The desert has always been a place of stillness, ceremony, and transformation—and green burial fits naturally within that rhythm. Here, simplicity carries deep spiritual resonance. Families choosing natural burial find meaning in allowing the body to return to the earth without barriers, nourishing the same land that sustained generations before them. From the high desert to the mountain foothills, green burial in New Mexico honors the harmony between human life and the timeless landscape that holds it. 🌿La Puerta Natural Burial Grounds - Belen, NM Just outside Belen, New Mexico, lies La Puerta Natural Burial Ground, the s tate’s first and only conservation burial cemetery. Tucked within nearly 40 acres of desert landscape, this site offers families the chance to return their loved ones to the earth in a way that is both simple and sustainable. La Puerta requires no embalming, no vaults, and only biodegradable burial containers. Graves are hand-dug, and natural markers like local stones are used so that over time, the land remains undisturbed and wild. Families may take part in the burial process, making the farewell deeply personal. Each burial helps conserve the fragile high desert ecosystem, ensuring that native plants and wildlife thrive. This is burial that doesn’t just avoid harm, but actively contributes to land protection and ecological health. For families in New Mexico, La Puerta represents a return to older traditions, burial that is straightforward, affordable, and connected to place. Here, loved ones are laid to rest beneath open skies and mesas, becoming part of the desert’s living cycle. If your community doesn’t yet have a green burial ground, begin by reaching out to caretakers or boards of existing cemeteries. Many traditional cemeteries are open to dedicating a section for natural burials once they understand the process and benefits. Share examples of desert-friendly practices such as using local stone markers, drought-tolerant native plants, and biodegradable materials suited for arid climates. Present the ecological and cultural value, reducing concrete use, preserving water, and respecting Indigenous understandings of the land. By working collaboratively, you can help transform existing cemeteries into places that both honor tradition and embrace New Mexico’s enduring connection to the natural world, If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
New York New York’s green burial movement is thriving at the intersection of nature and innovation. From the Adirondacks’ quiet forests to the rolling Hudson Valley and the protected lands of Long Island, New Yorkers are embracing burial practices that restore balance to the earth. In a state known for progress and preservation alike, natural burial offers a meaningful way to unite tradition with environmental responsibility. Families are choosing biodegradable materials, native plant restoration, and conservation land trusts to ensure that even in death, they contribute to life’s continual renewal. Each burial becomes both a personal act of remembrance and a collective gesture toward a greener future. 🌿Greensprings Cemetery - Newfield, NY High above Cayuga Lake in Newfield, Greensprings Natural Cemetery Preserve stretches across 130 acres of rolling meadows, forest, and sky, one of the most scenic and pioneering green cemeteries in the United States. Founded in 2006, it was among the first to earn Green Burial Council certification, setting the standard for natural burial in the Northeast. At Greensprings, there are no vaults, no embalming, and no polished headstones. Burials use biodegradable shrouds or simple wooden caskets, allowing each person to return fully to the soil. Native grasses and wildflowers slowly reclaim each grave, weaving every life back into the ecology of the land. Every burial at Greensprings supports permanent land protection. The preserve’s mission is to restore and maintain natural habitats while offering an environmentally conscious resting place. Visitors walk along mown trails and open fields, where meadowlarks and pollinators thrive. Greensprings welcomes people of all faiths and backgrounds. Families are invited to participate in burials, from carrying the body to lowering it into the grave, creating a deeply personal experience rooted in love and connection. 🌿Spirit Sanctuary Green Burials - Essex, NY Nestled in the hills of the Hudson Valley, Spirit Sanctuary in natural Rhinebeck is New York’s first conservation burial ground, a sacred space where the end of life becomes an act of environmental restoration. Developed in partnership with the Conservation Burial Alliance and the New York Open Center , Spirit Sanctuary blends ecology, spirituality, and simplicity. Every burial here supports land conservation. No vaults, embalming, or metal caskets are allowed, only biodegradable materials that return the body to the soil. As the forest floor reclaims each grave, it becomes part of a larger ecosystem that nourishes new growth. Spirit Sanctuary is open to all faiths and backgrounds, rooted in the belief that death can be approached with reverence and ecological awareness. Families may participate in every step of the burial, creating a communal, healing experience grounded in love and respect. Each interment at Spirit Sanctuary contributes to protecting Rhinebeck’s natural habitat, ensuring that the land remains untouched by development. The sanctuary represents a modern evolution of ancient traditions: returning to the earth as part of a cycle that sustains life. 🌿Grasmere Cemetery at Rhinebeck Cemetery (hybrid) - Rhinebeck, NY The Natural Burial Ground at the Town of Rhinebeck Cemetery was opened in 2014 and is only the second municipal natural burial ground in New York State. It is nestled back from historic Mill Road, adjacent to the Grasmere section of the cemetery, and is set in a young hardwood forest on land that once served as pasture to the Grasmere Estate. 🌿Sleepy Hollow Cemetery (hybrid) - Sleepy Hollow, NY Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, that “Sleepy” place which serves as the backdrop to Washington Irving’s short story, “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow”, is largely just that – a quiet and sleepy resting place where little seems to ever change. Following the Pocantico River as it meanders through the pristine terrain of the cemetery, one feels like they are in a place lost in a time long gone. One can easily imagine Ichabod Crane following this very path in the legendary story. Yet, this timeless gem in Westchester County, New York is actually among the most progressive and forward thinking cemeteries in the United States. For in the opening of the “Riverview Natural Burial Grounds”, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery has become part of a very small and elite group of burial places in the country, which afford the deceased a “natural” or “green” burial option. 🌿White Haven Memorial Park (hybrid) - Pittsford, NY White Haven Memorial park has a special area Certified by the Green Burial Council. This area is specifically for full body burial with no vault, no casket and no cremation. The body is placed in a biodegradable container or cloth shroud. There is one embalming solution that is certified by the Green Burial Council, which is made up of essential oils vs. toxic chemicals. The goal is to allow the body to return to the soil naturally. Graves are double the width since there are no vaults or caskets used. This helps keep the integrity of each burial. 🌿Holy Sepulchre (hybrid) - Rochester, NY In 2013, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery & Ascension Garden became the first Catholic cemeteries in New York State to earn Green Burial Council Certification as approved providers of green burial grounds. Only after extensive ecological assessments and formal application was this honor bestowed. The certification furthers the commitment of Holy Sepulchre & Ascension Garden to the environment, and provides beautiful, natural surroundings while meeting the highest standards of the cemetery industry. 🌿Ascension Garden Cemetery (hybrid) - Henrietta, NY In 2013, Holy Sepulchre Cemetery & Ascension Garden became the first Catholic cemeteries in New York State to earn Green Burial Council Certification as approved providers of green burial grounds. Only after extensive ecological assessments and formal application was this honor bestowed. The certification furthers the commitment of Holy Sepulchre & Ascension Garden to the environment, and provides beautiful, natural surroundings while meeting the highest standards of the cemetery industry. 🌿Forest Hill Cemetery @ Forest Lawn (hybrid) - Attica, NY At the Forest Lawn Group, we’re proud to offer green burial options for families who want to honor their loved ones while caring for the environment. Our green burials use biodegradable materials and avoid harmful chemicals, helping to conserve natural resources, reduce carbon emissions, protect worker health, and restore natural habitats. We adhere to the Green Burial Council’s guidance and certification. At Forest Hill Cemetery, Phelps’ Meadow offers a field of natural burial lots with a large shared permanent memorial stone at the foot of the field to record individual names in the meadow. 🌿 Lakeside Cemetery in Hamburg, NY At the Forest Lawn Group, we’re proud to offer green burial options for families who want to honor their loved ones while caring for the environment. Our green burials use biodegradable materials and avoid harmful chemicals, helping to conserve natural resources, reduce carbon emissions, protect worker health, and restore natural habitats. We adhere to the Green Burial Council’s guidance and certification.At Lakeside Cemetery, The Oaks offers a natural burial section with a traditional memorial marker for each grave. If your area doesn’t yet have a dedicated green or conservation burial ground, start by approaching the trustees or managers of local cemeteries with curiosity and respect. Ask if they’ve considered setting aside a section for vault-free burials or revising their bylaws to allow shrouded or biodegradable caskets. Highlight that New York already has several successful examples, such as Greensprings Natural Cemetery Preserve and Sleepy Hollow’s hybrid section, that demonstrate how natural burial can exist with traditional practices. By sharing data on growing public interest and the ecological benefits, you can help your local cemetery become part of New York’s evolving legacy of sustainability and remembrance. If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
North Carolina From the misty Blue Ridge Mountains to the pine forests and coastal plains, North Carolina’s landscape speaks to a deep and enduring relationship with nature. Here, green burial isn’t just an environmental choice—it’s a continuation of the Southern tradition of family, faith, and respect for the earth. Families are rediscovering that a natural burial, free from embalming and metal caskets, offers a more intimate and meaningful farewell. Whether resting beneath native wildflowers or beneath the canopy of longleaf pines, green burial in North Carolina brings renewal to both land and spirit. 🌿Carolina Memorial Sanctuary - Mills River, NC Nestled in Mills River, just south of Asheville, Carolina Memorial Sanctuary is a breathtaking 11-acre conservation burial ground where people, wildlife, and the land coexist in perfect harmony. Certified by the Green Burial Council, it’s North Carolina’s first conservation burial ground, permanently protected and managed as a nature preserve. Carolina Memorial Sanctuary requires no embalming, vaults, or metal caskets. Every burial uses biodegradable materials, and graves are dug by hand to preserve the land’s integrity. Visitors find meadows of wildflowers, stands of native trees, and pollinators moving gently through the open fields. Each burial restores the ecosystem, turning grief into growth. As a conservation burial ground, every interment directly supports land protection. The Sanctuary partners with environmental organizations to ensure that this land will always remain undeveloped and ecologically healthy. Its stewardship model means burials are part of a larger cycle of preservation and renewal. The Sanctuary invites family participation, offering a quiet, sacred experience that fosters connection with both loved ones and the earth. Visitors can walk winding trails or sit in refle ction by the river, surrounded by the sounds of nature. 🌿Bluestem Conservation Cemetery - Cedar Grove, NC Set among 87 acres of rolling meadows, forests, and wetlands in Cedar Gro ve, Bluestem Conservation Cemetery offers a breathtaking return to the land, a place where remembrance and restoration are one. Certified by the Green Burial Council, Bluestem is a true conservation burial ground, ensuring that every interment contributes to the protection and regeneration of North Carolina’s native landscape. At Bluestem, graves are dug by hand and filled without vaults, embalming, or metal caskets. Each burial uses biodegradable materials, allowing the body to return fully to the soil. Families are invited to participate in the burial process, creating a deeply personal and sacred farewell. Every burial helps conserve the property in partnership with the Triangle Land Conservancy , guaranteeing that the land will never be developed. The cemetery’s open fields and forested paths provide vital habitats for wildlife, pollinators, and native plants turning grief into growth with each passing season. 🌿 A Place of Peace and Purpose Visitors describe Bluestem as both grounding and inspiring — a landscape where beauty and biodiversity coexist with reflection and remembrance. It’s a place for those who wish to return to the earth in a way that sustains it. 🌿Mordecai’s Meadow at Historic Oakwood Cemetery (hybrid) - Raleigh, NC In the Spring of 2016, Oakwood Cemetery opened Mordecai’s Meadow, a green burial section located in the North West section of Oakwood Cemetery. Green Burial is simple and natural. It reunites our bodies with the earth using biodegradable caskets, no embalming fluids, and no concrete or metal vaults. It allows the cycle of nature to be completed, ashes to ashes, dust to dust. Mordecai’s Meadow at Historic Oakwood Cemetery will allow members of our community, who wish to “return to the earth” to do so in a peaceful, yet urban, environment, surrounded by generations of Raleigh citizens who passed before them. Oakwood is returning to it’s roots, and offering a burial option that looked much like the original burials here at Oakwood in the 1860s. As we return to the “traditional” way of burial with this section, the name Mordecai’s Meadow was inspired by the original burials at Oakwood Cemetery and the previous landowners of our grounds, the Mordecai family. If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!
November 6, 2025
Ohio Ohio’s gentle hills and ancient forests hold a long history of reverence for the land, making it a natural place for the green burial movement to take root. Many Ohioans are rediscovering the simplicity and beauty of returning the body to the earth without chemical interference or concrete barriers. Whether in rural meadows or wooded preserves, families across the state are seeking options that align with both their environmental values and their spiritual sense of continuity with the land. Green burial here honors the rhythm of nature, allowing each life to nourish what comes next. 🌿Foxfield Preserve - Wilmot, OH Nestled within the protected forests of the Wilderness Center in Wilmot, Foxfield Preserve is Ohio’s first conservation burial ground — and one of the earliest in the nation. Since 2008, it has offered families a way to lay loved ones to rest in harmony with nature, where every burial supports land preservation and wildlife habitat. 🌿 A Living Sanctuary At Foxfield, burials are entirely natural: no embalming, no vaults, no metal caskets. Graves are dug by hand, and biodegradable caskets or shrouds allow each body to return gently to the soil. Families are encouraged to participate in the burial process, creating an intimate, meaningful farewell. 🌿 Conservation in Action Each interment directly contributes to the care and protection of over 1,000 acres of The Wilderness Center’s woodlands and prairies. The preserve’s wildflowers, songbirds, and native trees form a living memorial — proof that death can nurture new life. 🌿 Education and Advocacy Foxfield doesn’t just offer burials — it also teaches. Through tours and workshops, the preserve educates the public about natural burial and sustainability, inspiring other communities across the Midwest to follow suit. 🌿Heritage Acres Memorial - Cincinnati, OH In the rolling hills just east of Cincinnati, Heritage Acres Memorial Sanctuary offers a peaceful, natural resting place where people can return to the earth in the most life-giving way possible. Spanning 40 acres of meadows, woodlands, and walking trails, this Green Burial Council–certified sanctuary is both a cemetery and a nature preserve — a place where grief and growth intertwine. 🌿 A Sanctuary for All Heritage Acres welcomes people of all faiths, cultures, and backgrounds. Every burial is free of vaults, embalming, and metal caskets — instead using biodegradable shrouds or caskets to allow the body to decompose naturally and nourish the land. Families are invited to participate in the burial process, creating a deeply personal experience. 🌿 Restoring the Land Each interment at Heritage Acres supports native plant restoration and wildlife habitat. Visitors are greeted by open skies, wildflowers, and the hum of pollinators — a living memorial that continually renews itself with each season. 🌿 Community and Care The Sanctuary is sustained by volunteers and community members who share a commitment to sustainability, reverence, and simplicity. Education, guided tours, and events help others learn about green burial and its role in ecological healing. 🌿Kokosing Nature Preserve - Gambier, OH In Gambier, Ohio, Kokosing Nature Preserve brings together land conservation, education, and natural burial in a way that’s both deeply personal and profoundly ecological. Managed by Kenyon College’s Philander Chase Conservancy , this 23-acre preserve offers families a chance to rest in peace while supporting the permanent protection of the land. 🌿 Burial in Balance Kokosing allows only biodegradable caskets or shrouds, with no vaults or embalming. Graves are carefully dug by hand, and families can take part in the burial process, connecting body, land, and legacy. Each burial is a return to the soil — simple, sacred, and sustainable. 🌿 A Conservation Mission All proceeds from the cemetery support Kenyon College’s conservation work, helping preserve hundreds of acres of farmland and forest in the Kokosing River Valley. The preserve serves as both a resting place and a living classroom, where students and visitors can learn about ecology, end-of-life sustainability, and stewardship. 🌿 A Living Legacy Set amid meadows and woodlands, Kokosing Nature Preserve is a model for how green burial and higher education can coexist — honoring those who’ve passed while teaching future generations about the cycles of life and the importance of protecting the earth. 🌿 Glen Forest Cemetery - Yellow Springs, OH In the Ozark foothills of eastern Oklahoma, Glen Forest Cemetery offers families a peaceful, natural place to return to the earth. Surrounded by woodlands and wildlife, this certified hybrid green cemetery is one of the first in the state to welcome both traditional and fully natural burials — giving Oklahomans meaningful choices rooted in simplicity and sustainability. 🌿 A Place of Peace Green burials at Glen Forest are free from embalming, metal caskets, and vaults. Loved ones are laid to rest in biodegradable caskets or shrouds, allowing the body to decompose naturally and nourish the surrounding forest. Families can take part in the process, creating a hands-on and heartfelt farewell. 🌿 Hybrid Flexibility As a hybrid cemetery, Glen Forest accommodates both conventional and natural burials — so families with different wishes can still rest together in one place. The cemetery’s green section blends seamlessly into the native landscape, maintained with minimal disturbance and no synthetic chemicals. 🌿 A Natural Legacy With its wooded setting and commitment to ecological care, Glen Forest stands as a model for what’s possible in Oklahoma. It shows that conservation and compassion can coexist, offering a resting place that honors both people and the planet.  🌿Union Grove Cemetery (hybrid) - Canal Winchester, OH No information online other than green is allowed. If your community doesn’t yet have a designated green burial section, you can still help create one. Start by approaching local cemetery boards or sextons to discuss setting aside a portion of existing grounds for natural burials. Present examples from nearby states or Ohio conservation initiatives to illustrate community interest and environmental benefits. Ask about bylaws regarding vaults and embalming, many can be waived through board approval. By initiating a thoughtful, respectful conversation, you can help your local cemetery evolve into a more sustainable resting place for future generations. If you want information on how to start your own natural burial cemetery, or you want to make me aware of another green, natural, or hybrid cemetery in this state, please reach out!