On April 1, 1867,
Archbishop James F. Wood purchased a little more than 41 acres in
North Philadelphia for a second diocesan cemetery after
Cathedral Cemetery, which opened in 1849. The new cemetery was to be about 8 miles to the northeast, in the
Franklinville neighborhood of Philadelphia and named New Cathedral. It opened on Sunday, August 30, 1868. One of the first burials in the cemetery was the body of
Mary Mohrman, a six-year-old murder victim. The funds raised by the sale of burial lots were used for the construction of the
Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul. The diocese eventually opened 12 cemeteries in the Philadelphia area. Church services were originally held in the mansion of the former owner of the property until the construction, in 1872, of
St. Veronica Chapel and rectory, at the entrance to the cemetery at North Second Street and Nicetown Lane, which is West Butler Street today. When not used for church services, the little wooden chapel served as a mortuary space to the cemetery. However, the parish outgrew the small chapel and a new church was built in 1892 on the northeast corner of 6th and Tioga Streets. Memorials for five
American Civil War veterans buried in the cemetery were held in 2011 and 2019. ==Notable burials==