In 1880, eight Orlando residents pooled resources to buy 26 acres of land and form Orlando Cemetery. The name was changed to Greenwood Cemetery in 1915 at the request of two of its founders. The cemetery has expanded with land purchases over time and now has 86 acres. Sections of the cemetery are dedicated to Confederate veterans, Union veterans, Spanish–American War veterans, World War I veterans, and World War II veterans. Moonlight walking tours of the cemetery are popular in Orlando. These tours are led by a sexton and offer a window into Orlando's history. A section of the cemetery contains unmarked plots for victims of lynchings by white people, according to history professor Vibert White. One such victim, July Perry, who was hanged in 1920 after trying to vote in Ocoee, received a headstone in 2002. In the wake of the
Pulse nightclub shooting of June 12, 2016, the City of Orlando offered plots for those killed. ==Notable burials==