In 1848, property owned by Heber C. Kimball and Newel K. Whitney was set aside as a cemetery. Whitney was buried there after his death on 23 September 1850. Eighteen years later, Kimball and his wife
Vilate were as well. In total, fifty-six family members and friends were buried there, the majority in unmarked graves. In the 1890s, the Kimball and Whitney families placed a marker on the monument inside the cemetery containing all fifty-six names. In 1976, the
Daughters of Utah Pioneers placed a bronze marker at the Main Street entrance of the cemetery, which reads: "Heber C. Kimball, pioneer of 1847 and
First Counselor to
Brigham Young, was allotted the land adjacent to this monument upon which to build homes for his family, the majority of whom arrived in 1848. He and Newel K. Whitney dedicated a plot of ground one-half block east as a private cemetery for both families. Buried therein are 33 Kimballs, 13 Whitneys, and 10 others. Both Heber C. Kimball and Newell K. Whitney are interred in this sacred spot." On 20 June 1998, Elder
Bruce D. Porter of
the Seventy rededicated the monument. ==See also==